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Spider-Man Goes Into Record
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Spider-Man has become
the first film to hit 100 million dollars in its first weekend in
America. The live-action adaptation starring Tobey Maguire as the Marvel
Comics web-slinger shattered box-office records with a $114 million
debut, surpassing the previous best of $90.3 million taken in by Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone during its first three days last autumn.
With $39.3 million on Friday and $43.7 million on Saturday, director Sam
Raimi's Spider-Man also beat the single-day record of $33.5 million set
by Harry Potter in its second day, according to studio figures.
"I don't think there's a distribution record in history that hasn't
been shattered," said Jeff Blake, Sony president of world-wide
marketing and distribution. "That 100 million dollars opening
weekend has always been sort of a great white whale of the movie
business. To have Spider-Man capture it is just thrilling."
Spider-man made extensive use of the Mark Roberts Motion Control's Milo system
for creating the "Spidey Sense" scenes, in which Tobey's
supernatural senses allow him to sense danger outside of sight. All the
shots were pre-visualised in Maya first to allow the director to get the
feel of the moves exactly right. Additionally, Camera Control Inc. used
the Gemini interface to give the Libra Pan-Tilt-Roll heads extensive
motion control capabilities for creating the large New York sky-lines
for Spider-man's extensive city flights. The Libra head was used from
the Queensborough Bridge. Spider-man himself was Computer Generated
onto the large New York city scenes.

Picture Courtesy of Sony Pictures
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