By Lindsey Bahr / The Associated Press
Audiences came back for a second helping of Moana and Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them this weekend. Both family-friendly films topped the post-Thanksgiving box-office charts, with Moana bringing in $28.4 million and Fantastic Beasts earning $18.5 million, according to studio estimates Sunday.
Disney’s animated Moana, in only its second weekend in theaters and second weekend at No. 1, has grossed $119.9 million, while Warner Bros.’s Harry Potter spinoff Fantastic Beasts has earned $183.5 million in three weeks.
Paramount’s sci-fi mindbender Arrival took third with $7.3 million, while the company’s World War II spy thriller Allied placed fourth with $7.1 million. Disney and Marvel’s Doctor Strange rounded out the top 5 with $6.5 million, bringing its domestic total to $215.3 million.
The weekend’s only new opener, the microbudget horror film Incarnate, fell short of modest expectations and took in only $2.6 million. The film, which stars Carice van Houten and Aaron Eckhart, was expected to earn in the $4 million range.
“We are disappointed that we fell short of our goal and repeating the success of our previous releases,” BH Tilt executive John Hegeman said. “The low-cost nature of the BH Tilt films and release model enables us to experiment and take risks, and we look forward to seeing what we can learn from this weekend for our future BH Tilt slate releases in 2017.”
In limited release, the Jacqueline Kennedy biopic Jackie, starring Natalie Portman in one of the year’s buzziest performances, earned $275,000 from five theaters. Another awards contender, Manchester by the Sea, expanded to 156 theaters and brought in $2.4 million. Paul Dergarabedian, a senior media analyst for box-office tracker comScore, said this post-Thanksgiving weekend is usually pretty slow.
“The Thanksgiving holiday is a long, extended binge of eating food and watching lots of movies, and then this weekend is the diet. It is somewhat typical,” Dergarabedian said. “It’s like we’re taking a quick breather before the homestretch.”
The weekend overall is expected to be down about 3 percent from last year, which saw the Christmas-themed horror film Krampus rake in $16.3 million. But the box office for the year remains up around 4 percent. The question now is whether the 2016 box office will surpass last year’s record $11.135 billion. While there are still some big films on the horizon, including Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and the animated Sing, it remains to be seen whether they will compete with the late-game 2015 juggernaut of The Force Awakens, which earned $652 million in the last 14 days of the year.
“It’s going to be a tight race,” Dergarabedian said.
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at US and Canadian theaters, according to comScore.com where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included.
- Moana, $28.4 million ($32 million international)
- Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, $18.5 million ($60.4 million international)
- Arrival, $7.3 million ($4.8 million international)
- Allied, $7.1 million ($12.1 million international)
- Doctor Strange, $6.5 million ($3.7 million international)
- Trolls, $4.6 million ($7.1 million international)
- Hacksaw Ridge, $3.4 million ($1.8 million international)
- Bad Santa 2, $3.3 million ($1 million international)
- Incarnate, $2.6 million ($370,000 international)
- Almost Christmas, $2.5 million
Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the US and Canada), according to comScore:
- Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, $60.4 million
- Your Name, $40.9 million
- Moana, $32 million
- Underworld: Blood Wars, $16.3 million
- Allied, $12.1 million
- Sully, $11.2 million
- Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, $10.5 million
- Sword Master, $7.3 million
- Jack Reacher: Never Go Back, $5.9 million
- Arrival, $4.8 million