By Lindsey Bahr | The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES—After breaking opening weekend records, Avengers: Infinity War continued to dominate in its second weekend in theaters, but alternative programming like the romantic comedy Overboard also found an audience in what has historically been considered the “official” kick-off to the summer movie season.
The Walt Disney Co. said last Sunday that Avengers: Infinity War will gross an estimated $112.5 million from North American theaters over the weekend, becoming the second-highest grossing film in weekend two behind Star Wars: The Force Awakens’s $149.2 million and just slightly ahead of Black Panther ($111.7 million). It’s a 56-percent drop from its first weekend in theaters—less steep than the second weekend fall of Avengers: Age of Ultron (59.4 percent) or Captain America: Civil War (59.5 percent), but more than Black Panther’s uniquely soft 44.7-percent sophomore weekend decline.
“We’re in uncharted territory again,” comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian said. “This is a second weekend number that many films would aspire to have on opening weekend.”
Globally, Avengers: Infinity War has now grossed over $1.2 billion and become the first film ever to cross the $1-billion mark in 11 days of release, and it has yet to even open in China.
There was little new competition this weekend in the blockbuster space, although there were a handful of other options, like Overboard, which came in a very distant second to Avengers, but still made a notable splash for a film its size.
MGM and Lionsgate’s Pantelion Films’s gender-swapped remake of Garry Marshall’s 1987 comedy, Overboard scored the highest-grossing opening weekend for Pantelion Films with a better-than-expected $14.8 million from 1,623 theaters. It’s already surpassed its modest mid-teens production budget.
Pantelion Films CEO Paul Presburger and Jonathan Glickman, president of the Motion Picture Group at MGM, both attribute the success to the star-power of Eugenio Derbez (Instructions Not Included, How to be a Latin Lover) who helped developed the bilingual remake with an American star (Anna Faris) to appeal not just to his Hispanic fan base but all audiences.
The cast, including Derbez and Eva Longoria, helped promote the film on their social-media accounts, too.
“It’s great to have a large base especially in the wake of Avengers,” Presburger said. “We have a movie out there that plays to families and all audiences that should have success into Mother’s Day and onward.”
Although critics were not especially won over by Overboard, audiences gave the film a more favorable “A-” CinemaScore. Third place went to A Quiet Place, which has grossed $159.9 million in five weeks in theaters, and fourth place to I Feel Pretty, now up to $37.8 million in weekend three. Rampage rounded out the top 5 with $4.6 million, bumping its domestic total to $84.8 million.
In sixth place, Tully, starring Charlize Theron, launched on 1,353 screens with $3.2 million. It’s the third collaboration between director Jason Reitman and screenwriter Diablo Cody, the team behind Juno, and their second with Theron, who also starred in their film Young Adult.
Hollywood’s summer movie season typically runs from the first weekend in May through Labor Day,
but this year got a jump-start with the late-April release of Avengers: Infinity War.
“This was not the strongest weekend ever in terms of the official kick-off of the summer season, but we could be looking at a record May ultimately,” Dergarabedian said, noting upcoming releases like Deadpool 2 (May 18) and Solo: A Star Wars Story (May 25). “This weekend just shows how the strategy of release dates is changing how the box office plays out.”
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at US and Canadian theaters, according to comScore. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included.
- Avengers: Infinity War, $112.5 million ($162.6 million international)
- Overboard, $14.8 million
- A Quiet Place, $7.6 million ($4.1 million international)
- I Feel Pretty, $4.9 million ($3.2 million international)
- Rampage, $4.6 million ($13.7 million international)
- Tully, $3.2 million ($200,000 international)
- Black Panther, $3.1 million ($390,000 international)
- Truth or Dare, $1.9 million ($5.7 million international)
- Super Troopers 2, $1.8 million ($90,000 international)
- Bad Samaritan, $1.8 million
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the US and Canada), according to comScore:
- Avengers: Infinity War, $162.6 million
- Us And Them, $27 million
- Rampage, $13.7 million
- A or B, $11.1 million
- Baahubali: The Conclusion, $7.9 million
- Ready Player One, $6.3 million
- Truth or Dare, $5.7 million
- Champion, $5.5 million
- 102 Not Out, $3.4 million
- I Feel Pretty, $3.2 million.