Features

Harry Potter film opens with record

By David Germain The Associated Press
Friday November 15, 2002

LOS ANGELES — Harry Potter’s got his work cut out for him to match his box-office grades from freshman year. 

The boy wizard’s second film adventure, “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,” opens Friday on even more screens in more theaters than “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” did a year ago. 

But it may face a bit of a sophomore jinx. Distributor Warner Bros. concedes “Chamber of Secrets” may have a hard time equaling the $90.3 million opening weekend of “Sorcerer’s Stone.” 

“There was such an anticipation for the opening of the first one that it would really be extremely difficult and unrealistic that we could open to a number quite that large,” said Dan Fellman, Warner’s head of domestic distribution. 

As they did for “Sorcerer’s Stone,” night owls lined up Thursday night for the earliest screenings, a minute after midnight, although with somewhat less frenzy this time and perhaps in smaller numbers. At the Times Square Loews, where the film was showing on two screens, tickets were still available shortly before midnight. 

“Last time there were thousands of people, it seemed like,” said Jeff Duncan, 25, of Manhattan, who arrived with two friends to see the first showing, just as he did for “Sorcerer’s Stone.” Fearing a sellout, he had bought his tickets in advance. 

Elizabeth Evans and her husband, Peter Emery, stopped on an impulse on their way home to Brooklyn. The couple, semiretired opera singers in their late 40s, said they have read all the books and loved the first Potter film. 

“We can’t go if we don’t go tonight, it would be a few days, and who wants to wait,” Evans said. “I’ve been waiting all year.” 

“Sorcerer’s Stone” held the record for best opening-weekend gross until “Spider-Man” rolled in last spring with a $114.8 million debut. 

Adapted from the second of J.K. Rowling’s best-selling books, “Chamber of Secrets” follows Harry through year two at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, where he has a rematch with the evil conjurer who killed his parents. 

“Chamber of Secrets” will open in a record 3,682 theaters, 10 more than “Sorcerer’s Stone,” and play on a record 8,500 screens, up about 400 over the first film. 

While it may not break cash records, early reviews generally are calling “Chamber of Secrets” a better movie than “Sorcerer’s Stone.” That’s a sign the new film may have more staying power and eventually exceed the $317.6 million total taken in by “Sorcerer’s Stone.” 

“We’ve seen a lot of sequels besting their predecessors lately,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. “Everyone’s saying this one’s better, so the buzz is there.” 

Fandango’s advance sales for “Chamber of Secrets” were running comparable to those for “Sorcerer’s Stone,” Levitt said. 

Warner Bros. has tried hard to ensure that “Harry Potter” works the same magic again. Child stars Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint returned for part two, along with key adult cast members and director Chris Columbus. 

The filmmakers again followed the text of Rowling’s novel as inclusively as possible, producing a two hour, 41 minute movie — long by family film standards. 

Special effects are improved, and Columbus injects more action and a darker tone into “Chamber of Secrets.” 

“I knew we wanted to get it darker and edgier and more intense, more exciting. The first one had 45 minutes of introduction. This film, we got into the story” right away, Columbus said. 

The sequel also is opening in eight other countries Friday. It will be on about 1,270 screens in Great Britain, up about 70 over “Sorcerer’s Stone,” and on nearly 1,000 in France, up from 900 for the first film.