‘Postcards’ Takes No. 1 at Box Office : Movies: Mother-daughter comedy sales hit $8.1 million. Paramount’s ‘Ghost’ is in second place on $5.8 million in sales.
“Postcards from the Edge,” the Mike Nichols-directed comedy about a stormy mother-daughter relationship, starring Shirley MacLaine and Meryl Streep, claimed the No. 1 spot at the weekend box office. With ticket sales of approximately $8.1 million, the Columbia Pictures title gave a promising start to the fall moviegoing season--traditionally more “serious” than the summer.
Based on the semi-autobiographical novel by Carrie Fisher--who wrote the screenplay--”Postcards” opened on 1,013 screens, for a per-screen average of about $8,000.
Hovering at second place--in its 10th week--was Paramount Pictures’ runaway summertime hit, “Ghost.” With ticket sales of $5.8 million on 1,788 screens--a per-screen average of $3,284--the romantic fantasy has now grossed in excess of $141 million.
In third place, with ticket sales of about $4.9 million was MGM/UA’s “Death Warrant.” Starring Chuck Norris heir apparent, Jean Claude Van Damme, the action film--about an undercover cop in prison--opened with approximately $4,583 on 1,069 screens.
Fourth and fifth places, respectively, went to the summer holdovers “Presumed Innocent” and “Flatliners.” With ticket sales of approximately $2.7 million, Warner Bros.’ “Presumed Innocent” has now earned more than $74 million. Columbia’s “Flatliners” had ticket sales of about $2.6 million, for grosses of more than $47 million.
The just-out futuristic thriller “Hardware,” about a murderous robot, claimed sixth place. With ticket sales of about $2.3 million on 692 screens, the Millimeter Films release had a per-screen average of approximately $3,323.
In limited release, starring Sean Penn and Gary Oldman in a drama about the Irish mob in Hell’s Kitchen, Orion Pictures’ “State of Grace” performed impressively. With ticket sales of $179,927 on 14 screens, its per-screen average was a strong $12,852.
Another limited release, Warner Bros.’ “White Hunter, Black Heart”--a fictionalized treatment of the making of “The African Queen”-- directed by and starring Clint Eastwood, earned approximately $170,000 on 24 screens for about $8,333 per-screen.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.