’30 Days of Night’ bites into box office

? The horror tale “30 Days of Night” had three days of box-office bite.

The Sony fright flick, with Josh Hartnett leading Alaskans against ravenous vampires that turn up for the prolonged winter darkness, debuted as the weekend’s No. 1 movie with $16 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.

Audiences continued to choose merriment over misery as the latest crop of sober Academy Awards hopefuls, among them Ben Affleck’s “Gone Baby Gone,” Reese Witherspoon and Jake Gyllenhaal’s “Rendition” and Halle Berry and Benicio Del Toro’s “Things We Lost in the Fire,” debuted with so-so to dismal numbers.

Whether it’s the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, deadly news out of Pakistan and Myanmar or Friday’s stock market tumble, moviegoers seem disinterested in more bad news at theaters with films about child-kidnapping, torture, widowhood and heroin addiction.

“Fall is the season of the serious movie, and it seems like audiences in a way are resisting the serious movie right now,” said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Media By Numbers. “Audiences are finding their horror or their intensity in real life, and they’re not looking for it in the movies.”

While fun movies ruled, the overall box office skidded for the fifth-straight weekend. The top-12 movies took in $79.7 million, down 10 percent from the same weekend last year.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Media By Numbers LLC. Final figures will be released Monday.

1. “30 Days of Night,” $16 million.

2. “Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married?”, $12.1 million.

3. “The Game Plan,” $8.1 million.

4. “Michael Clayton,” $7.1 million.

5. “Gone Baby Gone,” $6 million.

6. “The Comebacks,” $5.85 million.

7. “We Own the Night,” $5.5 million.

8. “Tim Burton’s the Nightmare Before Christmas,” $5.1 million.

9. “Rendition,” $4.2 million.

10. “The Heartbreak Kid,” $3.9 million.