NEW YORK (AP) -- The Anthony Hopkins horror  film "The Rite" topped the box office on a weekend notable for the bump  many Oscar-nominated films received, according to studio estimates  Sunday.
  The Warner Bros. flick earned $15 million  from just under 3,000 theaters. The PG-13, "Exorcist"-influenced movie  drew most of its audience from the older-than-25 demographic.
  In its 10th week of release, the Weinstein Company's "The King's Speech" earned $11.1 million while adding nearly 900 screens.
  Now with a cumulative box-office haul of  $72.2 million, the story of King George VI's triumph over his stuttering  affliction continues to build momentum as the Oscar favorite for best  picture. It led with 12 Oscar nominations on Tuesday, and its director,  Tom Hooper, won best director from the Directors Guild on Saturday.
  Last week's top film, the Natalie Portman  romantic comedy "No Strings Attached," from Paramount, slipped to second  with $13.7 million.
    
  The other debut this weekend, CBS Films'  action film "The Mechanic," which stars Jason Statham and Ben Foster,  took in $11.5 million, tied for third with Sony's updated superhero film  "The Green Hornet."
  Heavily marketed, "The Rite" sought a PG-13  rating less to attract younger audience members than "not to offend"  older fans of the 73-year-old Hopkins, said Dan Fellman, head of  distribution for Warner Bros.
  Fellman credited the film's success to  Hopkins, who remains a draw for moviegoers, especially in scary films  that recall his famous performance as Hannibal Lecter in 1991's "The  Silence of the Lambs."
  "The King's Speech" saw the biggest increase  after Oscar nominations were announced Tuesday, jumping 41 percent from  its performance last weekend.
  The Coen brothers' Western "True Grit" was  up four percent in its sixth week, bringing its total to $138 million.  "The Fighter," in its eighth week, and Portman's "Black Swan," in its  ninth week, had only slight drop-offs from the prior weekend.
  Still, it was hard to ignore the rising tide  of "The King's Speech," which has usurped David Fincher's "The Social  Network" as prognosticators' pick to win best picture at the Academy  Awards on Feb. 27. Its star, Colin Firth, is believed to be a shoo-in  for best actor.
  "If I was in Vegas, I'd slip a few bucks on  it," said Fellman of "The King's Speech." (Warner Bros.'s dog in the  fight is Christopher Nolan's "Inception," whose chances for best picture  are considered slim.)
  The Screen Actors Guild, whose members make up a large block of academy voters, was to hand out their awards Sunday night.
  "The Oscar bump is in full effect," said Hollywood.com analyst Paul Dergarabedian.
  But the box-office opportunity for Academy  Awards favorites is available partially because of the lack of  blockbuster dominance in the marketplace. The weekend was Hollywood's  12th down-weekend in a row, meaning total box office was below that of  the corresponding weekend a year earlier.
  Last year's high January totals were largely  due to the enormous success of James Cameron's 3-D epic "Avatar," which  went on to become the highest grossing film ever.
  "`Avatar' is casting a long shadow, making  our comparisons week after week very tough," said Dergarabedian. "It's  an anomaly. ... The marketplace is kind of doing what it's supposed to  be doing."
  Dergarabedian says the streak of  down-weekends is likely to continue, possibly passing the 2005 record of  18 consecutive down-weekends.
  Estimated ticket sales for Friday through  Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final  figures will be released Monday.
  1. "The Rite," $15 million.
  2. "No Strings Attached," $13.7 million.
  3. "The Green Hornet," $11.5 million.
  (tie) "The Mechanic, $11.5 million.
  5. "The King's Speech," $11.1 million.
  6. "True Grit," $7.6 million.
  7. "The Dilemma," $5.5 million.
  8. "Black Swan," $5.1 million.
  9. "The Fighter," $4.1 million.
  10. "Yogi Bear," $3.2 million.