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LONDON (Reuters) - Romantic comedy "27 Dresses" topped the film charts after its opening weekend, knocking Dr Seuss off its perch, according to Screen International on Wednesday.
The story of a perpetual bridesmaid longing for her own big day, starring Katherine Heigl of "Grey’s Anatomy" fame, took 1.75 million pounds.
In second place, up one, was dance-school caper "Step Up 2 The Streets," a successor to 2006’s "Step Up."
Down one place in third was "The Spiderwick Chronicles", the story of a New York couple and their three children moving into one of moviedom’s spookiest houses.
Dr Seuss’s "Horton Hears a Who," the animated tale of an elephant trying to save a microscopic world on a speck of dust was at four.
New at five was teen comedy "Drillbit Taylor" with Owen Wilson as a down-at-heel bodyguard hired by three geeks to stop them being bullied at school.
At six, down two was "Meet The Spartans," a parody of the Spartan epic "300," while at seven, also down two, was caveman epic "10,000 BC."
The story of a presidential assassination plot, with Dennis Quaid and William Hurt, "Vantage Point," was down two places at eight while Disney’s "The Game Plan," with wrestler Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, was .....continued below
"The Orphanage" a Spanish horror movie about a missing child, was unchanged at 10.
LONDON (Reuters) - Romantic comedy "27 Dresses" topped the film charts after its opening weekend, knocking Dr Seuss off its perch, according to Screen International on Wednesday.
The story of a perpetual bridesmaid longing for her own big day, starring Katherine Heigl of "Grey’s Anatomy" fame, took 1.75 million pounds.
In second place, up one, was dance-school caper "Step Up 2 The Streets," a successor to 2006’s "Step Up."
Down one place in third was "The Spiderwick Chronicles", the story of a New York couple and their three children moving into one of moviedom’s spookiest houses.
Dr Seuss’s "Horton Hears a Who," the animated tale of an elephant trying to save a microscopic world on a speck of dust was at four.
New at five was teen comedy "Drillbit Taylor" with Owen Wilson as a down-at-heel bodyguard hired by three geeks to stop them being bullied at school.
At six, down two was "Meet The Spartans," a parody of the Spartan epic "300," while at seven, also down two, was caveman epic "10,000 BC."
The story of a presidential assassination plot, with Dennis Quaid and William Hurt, "Vantage Point," was down two places at eight while Disney’s "The Game Plan," with wrestler Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, was down two at nine.
"The Orphanage" a Spanish horror movie about a missing child, was unchanged at 10.