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More Stupid Pet Tricks

Matthew McConaughey showboats with Sarah Jessica Parker in Failure to Launch. The inane comedy wastes a mostly talented cast, throws in lousy gags and subjugates its strongest appeal—the late bloomer premise of adults still living with their parents. Kathy Bates

Close-Up: Actor Earl Holliman

Earl Holliman, 77, played Sergeant Bill Crowley opposite Angie Dickinson's Pepper Anderson on Police Woman, the popular NBC television series that ran from 1974 through 1978. In 2003, Box Office Mojo interviewed the actor, who also appeared in Hollywood classics Giant, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral and The Rainmaker, in anticipation of the show's DVD premiere.

Police Woman: Season One

Another 1970s cop series, Police Woman, premieres on DVD in the first and probably best season of the television program, which starred Angie Dickinson (Rio Bravo, Ocean's 11, Dressed to Kill) in the title role as sexy Pepper Anderson. The show ran on NBC from 1974 to 1978.

Around the World Roundup: 'Lion' Roars Back with Japan Debut

At an otherwise unenthusiastic foreign box office, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe renounced tepidity with a blockbuster opening in Japan. The family fantasy's first place launch was Buena Vista International's best mark there ever with $9 million from 655 screens. Steven SpielbergSteve MartinJim Carrey

'16 Blocks' Gets Clocked by 'Madea'

Tyler Perry's Madea's Family Reunion tumbled 58 percent to $12.6 million and still claimed the top spot as the weekend's four new releases floundered. Bruce WillisMilla Jovovich

Die Hard with Whine and Laughter

With Bruce Willis as a Manhattan cop paired with a black man, a bus, explosions and bad cops, 16 Blocks sounds like Die Hard: With A Vengeance, Speed and Assault on Precinct 13 rolled into one.

Around the World Roundup: French Comedy, 'Syriana' Lead Soft Foreign Box Office

With $7.6 million from three markets, French comedy Les Bronzés 3 - amis pour la vie led the soft overseas box office for the fourth weekend in a row. In its native France, it entered the all time Top 10, and its overall total stands at $73.3 million. Martin LawrenceJim Carrey

NEW CHARTS: Oscar Best Picture Effect

Two new Oscar charts are available, breaking down pre- and post-Oscar nomination grosses and post-Award grosses, by year or by movie. Viewing by year shows the average breakdown for all five best picture nominees in a given year, while viewing by movie shows all movies nominated between 1982 and the present. Premier Pass members can sort this chart by any column.

NEW CHART: Movie Page Daily Box Office Chart View

Premier Pass members can now see a movie's daily box office history in a new "chart view" format and sort it by any column. Users can choose either the standard calendar view or the new chart view as their default view by clicking the button at the bottom of the page or on the general user account configuration page.

Jane Austen's Pre-Feminism in Pretty Pictures

Director Joe Wright's melodious Pride and Prejudice, based on Jane Austen's novel, is a festive display of bright, jovial romanticism in long, lingering takes that loop around and spill into a beautiful British landscape photographed by Roman Osin. For all the pretty sound and pictures, the period piece is of little consequence. Emma ThompsonKeira KnightleyJudi Dench

German Nazi Drama Captivates

Sophie Scholl - The Final Days opens with the title character, a plain college student, singing to an American record in English. The scene is a proper introduction to the story of a good, joyful German in Nazi Germany. Neither apologia—like last year's dreadful Downfall—nor another trivialization of Nazism, this gripping account of an ordinary citizen's ordeal under National Socialism dramatizes how faith in the state extinguishes life.

'Madea' Drags Moviegoers to 'Family Reunion'

Gun-toting, big-boned grandma Madea kicked the grits out of the competition with a winning combination of warmth, relatability and, above all, humor. Paul WalkerSteve Martin

'Brokeback Mountain' Most Impressive of Tepid 2005

2005 is known as the year of the slump, but for all the excuses the industry and the media made throughout the year, the bottom line reason for the theatrical woes was the movies themselves. Ang LeeVince VaughnOwen WilsonWill SmithBrad PittAngelina Jolie

Around the World Roundup: French Comedy Reigns Again

For the third weekend in a row, a French comedy led the foreign box office. Les Bronzés 3 - amis pour la vie grabbed $11.2 million from three markets for a $62.9 million total, mostly from its native France where it's distributed by Warner Bros. Steven Spielberg

What a Dog's Life Can and Ought to Be

Walt Disney's Lady and the Tramp is another animated feature in Disney's vault that deserves praise and attention. To this uninitiated viewer, this movie, released in 1955, always looked like a harmless treat about a couple of dogs that swoon over one another. It is that and more, and it's far superior to what passes for kids' movies.

'Eight Below' Enjoys Warm Reception

Winning audiences with its lovable dogs and rousing trailer, Eight Below devoured a husky $25 million at 3,066 locations in four days, plowing past expectations to claim the President's Day weekend top spot. Buena Vista's survival tale of stranded sled dogs led 20th Century Fox's low brow Date Movie, which industry tracking had projected would be No. 1. Paul WalkerSamuel L. JacksonJulianne Moore

Stranded Sled Dogs Make for Gripping Tale

Grab anyone who's ever had or wanted a dog and go see the huskies of Eight Below, the winter adventure based on a true 1957 story, which was made into a Japanese motion picture in 1983. This gripping serial about a team of sled dogs marooned in Antarctica after a harrowing snowstorm rescue bounds, pulls and tugs as the dogs steal the spotlight. Paul WalkerRobert ZemeckisFrank Marshall

Around the World Roundup: 'Bronzés' Captures Gold Amidst the Olympics

Around the World Roundup France catapulted Les Bronzés 3 to the top of the foreign box office as the Torino Olympics took their toll last weekend, including so-so business for Munich… Domestically, business has been on par with 2005, but, internationally, 2006 has lagged behind last year, with only one blockbuster in play, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. The Winter Olympics in Torino, Italy, which is more popular overseas than in the United States, deterred new openings for the most part this past weekend, leaving the field to holdovers. Steven SpielbergGeorge ClooneyHarrison FordJim Carrey

'Tramp' Trumps 'Bambi II,' Pop Tops in Music Again

Burbank, California—Disney's 50th anniversary restoration premiere of Lady and the Tramp (on DVD Feb. 28) at Disney's El Capitan Theatre was better than expected. At next door Disney's Soda Fountain and Studio Store, they served spaghetti and stocked the shelves with a plush cocker spaniel Lady and mutt Tramp linked by a thin strand of pasta, like the famous scene in the movie. Nobody integrates like Disney. Clint EastwoodWoody Allen

'Pink Panther' Slinks Past 'Destination'

Between Steve Martin attempts to pronounce "hamburger" as French Inspector Clouseau and Death making mincemeat out of its teen victims, the weekend box office came out on par with the comparable frame last year, despite outside competition from the start of the Winter Olympics and major snow storms in the East. Harrison FordEddie MurphyRobin WilliamsShawn Levy
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