![]() It has not opened outside of North America yet.Box Office Records > Worldwide > All Movies > Cumulative > All Time Worldwide The inspirational crowd-pleaser has taken in $18.7 million in its first three weeks of domestic release. The PG-rated sports drama about real-life NFL star Kurt Warner and his unlikely rise from supermarket check-out clerk to Super Bowl quarterback fell -38.2% from last weekend, nabbing a $884 per-screen average in 2,728 theaters. Rounding out the top five was Lionsgate’s American Underdog with $2.4 million in its third weekend. The movie has nearly done double its North American business overseas, where it has rounded up $49.2 million, putting its cumulative global haul at $74.3 million. The King’s Man’s domestic box-office total now sits at $25.1 million. The R-rated origin story of the natty action franchise stars Ralph Fiennes and slipped -28.3% from the prior weekend, earning a $1,076 per-screen average in 3,040 theaters. In fourth place this week was 20th Century Studios’ The King's Man with $3.3 million in its third frame. The film will soon be seen by a lot more people since it will be available to stream on Peacock in just 45 days, and b.) it has not opened overseas yet, where its internationally high-profile cast may be able to move more tickets. While those who did pay to see it (56% of whom were women) gave the film a ‘B+’ CinemaScore grade, the globe-trotting actioner only managed a $1,526 per-screen average in 3,145 theaters. With its bright-green 37% splat from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, Universal’s PG-13-rated thriller about a group of international agents who band together to battle a common villain, limped into theaters, taking in just $4.8 million in its opening session. The distaff espionage ensemble starring a Who’s Who of cinema’s top leading ladies ( Jessica Chastain, Lupita Nyong’o, Penelope Cruz, Diane Kruger, and Fan Bingbing) couldn’t surmount the film’s bad buzz. Finishing in third was the aforementioned, sad-trombone debut of The 355. For comparison, the first Sing eventually topped out at $270.4 million domestically in 2016. Sing 2 has added $81.8 million internationally so far, bringing its three-week global total to $190.8 million. Zipping past $100 million over the weekend, Sing 2 became the only animated film to pass that hallowed threshold since Disney’s Frozen II back in 2019. ![]() Earning a $3,218 per-screen average in 3,713 theaters, the animated musical featuring the voices of Reese Witherspoon, Matthew McConaughey, and Bono has accrued $109 million to date. The PG-rated sequel collected a hair less than $12 million, dipping -40.7% from the prior weekend. ![]() In its third frame, Universal’s Sing 2 continues to hit some harmonious high notes with family audiences. In second place was another new record-breaker, albeit of a slightly more modest variety. Overseas, the webslinger has piled on another $867.5 million so far, putting its global total at just a hair under $1.54 billion-enough to slot it in eighth place worldwide, just ahead of 2102’s The Avengers ($1.52 billion). Next to fall will be fifth-place holder, 2018’s Avengers: Infinity War ($678.8 million). A week after breaking into the top 10 domestic earners of all time, it has already jumped up to sixth place, most recently leapfrogging year 2015’s Jurassic World ($652.4 million) and 1997’s Titanic ($659.4 million). No Way Home continues to smash box-office records left and right. Spidey’s North American total now stands at just under $668.8 million. Its $33 million in domestic receipts came from 4,012 theaters, which translates to a $8,229 per-screen average. In its fourth week of release, Sony’s PG-13 smash fell -41.1% from the previous frame. For years, superhero movies were said to be critic-proof, but now they seem to be immune to anything Mother Nature throws in their path, too. Let’s kick things off with the good news: After a month in theaters, Spider-Man: No Way Home continues to be one of the few Hollywood films to succeed despite of the pandemic. Meanwhile, Peter Parker and company continued their miracle run at the multiplex, not just taking the top spot again with ease (thanks to its $33 million North American haul over the weekend), but also continuing their assault on the record books, where the Tom Holland tentpole became the sixth highest-grossing film of all time at the domestic box office and the eighth-biggest worldwide. Even so, Universal’s globe-trotting espionage flick fell short of expectations, pulling in a paltry $4.8 million in its domestic debut. Buffeted by bad reviews and bleak box-office predictions, the star-studded female spy thriller, The 355, never really stood a chance against Spider-Man: No Way Home-not even in the blockbuster’s fourth weekend in theaters.
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