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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

‘Napoleon Dynamite’ keepson building profits

Scott Bowles and Claudia Puig USA Today

What are you gonna do today, Napoleon?

How about make $19.2 million and counting, gosh!

If those lines mean nothing to you, you’ve yet to meet “Napoleon Dynamite,” the unlikely character behind summer’s sleeper hit movie.

The $400,000 Sundance fave has been lurking around theaters since June, luring teens and young adults to the story of an Everydork trying to make it through high school in Preston, Idaho.

The film, starring newcomers Jon Heder, Aaron Ruell and Efren Ramirez, has kids seeing it for the fourth and fifth time.

They’re quoting lines from the movie, such as “Don’t be jealous that I’ve been chatting online with babes all day.” They’re punctuating sentences with Dynamite’s trademark “gosh!”

Not bad for a movie that is playing on fewer than 600 screens and that has yet to crack the top 10.

That won’t last long, however. Distributor Fox Searchlight continues to increase screens in the hopes of reaching 1,500 theaters nationwide.

“It still amazes me how it’s caught on,” Searchlight’s Steve Gilula says. “Nobody thought it would be this big.”

“Dynamite” did it with a canny spread-the-word campaign and by tapping into a “geek chic” that kids identify with.

Don’t believe it? Check out the “Napoleon Dynamite” T-shirts. Searchlight printed 100,000 of them and gave them to anyone willing to go to a free screening.

Searchlight also took the unusual step of bringing those moviegoers back for second and third helpings with “frequent viewer cards.” Every time someone came back (ideally, with a friend), he got more freebies, including pins, decals, and “Napoleon Dynamite” lip balm that reads: “My lips hurt real bad.”

“We were giving the film away to anyone who wanted to see it,” says Searchlight’s Nancy Utley. “Kids love free things.”

They also love the movie’s ultranerd aesthetics, from the wood paneling to brown polyester suits to Napoleon’s moon boots.

“Napoleon is a geek, but you still like him,” said 15-year-old Michael Gladden of Westland, Mich., who’s seen the film three times. “I’d rather see movies about a guy like that than a Hollywood stud any day.”

Not surprisingly, there’s already talk of a sequel. Utley says executives became certain “Dynamite” could become a franchise after Heder made an appearance at the recent Teen Choice Awards.

“Paris Hilton wanted his autograph,” she says. “When Paris Hilton wants Napoleon Dynamite’s autograph, you’re on to something.”