User blog:Ceauntay/Movie Projector:

This weekend is going to be very huge when four teenagers and the dog will be taking over their own rivals this weekend. As Easter is still weeks away, but will still never stop the power of Scooby and the Gang.

"Scooby-Doo! The Movie", an animated IMAX feature, is poised to have strong opening this year to about $60 million, which is double than it's solid $30 million budget according to people who have seen prerelease audience surveys.

Meanwhile, "Hop," a hybrid computer-animated comedy about the Easter bunny's teenage son that also features live actors, should come behind it to $25 million.

That should far exceed the ticket sales of "Source Code," a sci-fi thriller starring Jake Gyllenhaal, which will likely collect between $15 and $18 million. The other film opening in wide release this weekend, the horror film "Insidious," is projected to gross around $11 million. "Hop" was financed by Universal Pictures and Relativity Media for around $63 million, meaning that the film should be off to a pretty good start if projections are accurate. But the movie will face competition from last week's No. 1 film, "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules," because both are targeting a family audience. "Hop" was made by producer Chris Meledandri's movie company Illumination Entertainment, which last July released the animated hit "Despicable Me." That film opened to $56.4 million and went on to collect $251.5 million domestically and another $276.5 million overseas. But "Hop," whose main character is voiced by comedian Russell Brand, is a live-action-animation combo, and that genre of film has a mixed track record at the box office. Though the two hybrid films in 20th Century Fox's "Alvin and the Chipmunks" franchise were blockbusters, each grossing over $350 million worldwide, the studio's "Marmaduke" only brought in $83.7 million globally last year. Warner Bros.' 3-D hybrid "Yogi Bear," which opened to a weak $14.4 million in the U.S. and Canada last December, went on to have a surprisingly long box-office life, ending up with $200 million worldwide. "Hop" is also opening this weekend in 26 foreign markets, including the United Kingdom, Germany and Italy. "Source Code," about a soldier forced into a secret military program through which he relives the last eight minutes of another man's life, is generating the most interest from older males. The movie was financed by Vendome Pictures, French producer Philippe Rousselet's company, for $32 million after tax credits. Summit Entertainment is distributing the film, which has so far garnered a positive 92% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes. "Insidious" was produced by the makers of "Paranormal Activity." Like that hit horror franchise, the film starring Patrick Wilson and Rose Byrne was extremely inexpensive to make, with a budget of only $1.5 million. The movie was acquired at the Toronto Film Festival by FilmDistrict, the releasing company formed by producer Graham King last September. "Insidious" is the first release for the new distributor, which plans to acquire and release four to eight pictures a year. Also on tap is "Soul Surfer," which hits theaters next weekend.

In limited release, The Weinstein Co. will open a PG-13 version of its best picture Oscar winner "The King's Speech." A new cut of the film, without its Oscar-winning star Colin Firth dropping the f-bomb, will replace the current R-rated version in 1,000 theaters. IFC will also open the Sundance Film Festival favorite "Super," starring Rainn Wilson, in 11 theaters in five cities, including Los Angeles and New York. -- Amy Kaufman