"Sparkle," Whitney Houston's
final movie, grossed $12 million at the box office, according
to estimates provided by the film's distributor TriStar/Sony. The
tally was on the low end of expectations.
| • Op-Ed: Why 'Sparkle' Will Shine for Young Women • 4 Takes on 'Something...' • Whitney & Jordin's 'Celebrate' • THR: 'Sparkle' Film Review |
The musical film, which co-stars Jordin Sparks,
is expected to be No. 5 at the box office when the final numbers
for the weekend are released Monday. It opened on 2,244 screens,
grossing $4.5 million on Friday and $200,000 less on Saturday.
Houston's
previous theatrical release, 1996's "The Preacher's Wife," pulled
in $7.6 million in its opening weekend in December 1996. It would
go on to gross $48 million.
"Waiting to
Exhale," the ensemble drama from 1995, made $14.2 million when it
opened and 1992's "The Bodyguard gross $16.6 million in its opening
stanza. All of Houston's previous films opened between Thanksgiving
and Christmas.
August, never a good month for
original themes and characters, is typical this year with big budget
sequels - "The Expendables 2," "The Bourne Legacy" - family fare
("ParaNorman 3D") and comedies such as "The Campaign." "Sparkle" was
a bit of counter-programming, a plan that was in place prior to
Houston's death on February.
The film was
promoted to women and audiences who would connect with its music and
themes of faith and family. The Hollywood Reporter reported that
74 percent of the audience was female and 62 percent over the age of
35.
Houston plays the mother of three girls who
form a a singing group in Detroit. The original, featuring the
music of Curtis Mayfield and the voice of Aretha Franklin, came out
in 1976.

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