Spider-Man, Shrek lead summer of sequels
By Paul Bond
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Get ready for the summer of sequels.
Starting with Sony's "Spider-Man 3," set to open May 4, and ending with New Line's "Rush Hour 3," slated for August 10, the schedule is stacked with high-profile releases that are expected to fill theaters and get cash registers cranking.
"Lines beget lines," says Chuck Viane, Disney's domestic distribution president. "You get people in there seeing the trailers for the fall movies and one thing triggers another. That's the really great thing about our business. When we're on a roll, there's a snowball effect."
If the summer of 2007 lives up to expectations, it could turn out to be the biggest in box office history, shattering the record held by the summer of 2004, when 557.4 million admissions generated roughly $3.5 billion in revenue during the 15 week period between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
Among the other films that are expected to get the record mojo going: Paramount-DreamWorks' "Shrek the Third," set for May 18; Disney's "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End," which opens the next week; Warner Bros.' "Ocean's Thirteen" and Sony's "Surf's Up," both set to open June 8; Fox's "Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer," slated for June 15; and Universal's "Evan Almighty," set for June 22.
The hit parade continues with Disney-Pixar's "Ratatouille" on June 29, Paramount's "Transformers" on July 4, Warner Bros.' "Harry Potter & the Order of the Phoenix," and New Line's "Hairspray" on July 20 and Fox's "The Simpsons Movie" on July 27.
Each studio has a couple of potential summer blockbusters, but could there be too much of a good thing? In the past, there has been more "breathing room" between films, a studio executive posits, wondering if the titles will step on each other's shelf life. "It will be interesting to see if this is a summer where we open big for a week then go away quickly."
But while the studios might fret the fate of individual films, the sheer number of big films opening seems to make it a no-lose situation for theater owners. Continued...





