Each week on Atom Insider, we break down the box office numbers for all of the biggest films opening in theaters. This week, Hollywood released a few new alternatives for audiences, but it wasn’t enough to topple the biggest movie of the year so far.

This Week’s Top Earner (For The Second Week In A Row) – ‘Captain Marvel’

The latest entry into the MCU dominated the box office once again this week, dropping just 54% for a domestic haul of $69 million. Worldwide, Captain Marvel has made a staggering $762 million, already surpassing the entire run of similar Marvel standalone films like Iron Man, Captain America, Doctor Strange, and plenty more. At this rate, barring a drastic third-weekend dropoff, it’s a near-certainty it will cross the billion dollar mark. Marvel has a new heavy hitter, and her name is Carol Danvers.

Second Place  – ‘Wonder Park’

Paramount and Nickelodeon Movies rolled out the red carpet for their new animated family film Wonder Park, giving it a chance to play around in over 3,800 theaters. With $16 million domestic, the film made just enough to snag the #2 spot at the box office, but that reported budget of $100 million is looking like a steep climb for this roller coaster movie. Critics have so far been mostly unamused, too, so we can expect this one to nosedive by next week.

And Third  – ‘Five Feet Apart’

Critics may have found a few faults in the stars of Five Feet Apart, but audiences were more than happy to check in for this appointment with Haley Lu Richardson and Cole Sprouse. The weepy teen romance collected $13.1 million domestically, already surpassing its low budget of $7 million and surpassing Lionsgate’s expectations and then some.

Rounding Out The Rest Of The Box Office

Universal and DreamWorks Animation’s How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World fell two spots to #4 this week with $9.3 million in the U.S., a less impactful drop than last week despite new animated competition from Paramount. Similarly, Tyler Perry’s A Madea Family Funeral dropped two spots with a domestic take of $8 million, despite playing in about a thousand fewer theaters than The Hidden World.

Two more films debuted this week, one in limited release and one in over 2,500 theaters. The latter is Captive State from Focus Features, which came in at #7 with $3.1 million. And despite only premiering in 472 theaters, Pantelion’s No Manches Frida 2 secured #6 with $3.8 million. This is the second-highest per-theater average in the Top 10, beaten only by Captain Marvel.

The Lego Movie 2 dropped four spots this week to #8, making just $2.1 million in its 6th week. Aside from Lego Ninjago, this is the weakest-performing Lego film by far($171.4 million), making a little over half of what Lego Batman pulled off in 2017, not to mention the first Lego Movie in 2014.

Alita: Battle Angel is also fading fast, making just $1.9 million in its 5th week and dropping four spots to #9. Despite the point of the “Alita Challenge” being for this film to make more than Captain Marvel, it definitely failed in that regard. Regardless, Battle Angel still has slim hopes for a sequel thanks to its worldwide total of $394 million, assuming the marketing budget was far less expensive than it seemed.

Finally, our #10 film of the week is Green Book, which dropped four spots after stalling in place last weekend. Universal’s Oscar trophy collected another $1.2 million domestically in its 18th week.

And They’re Out

Isn’t It Romantic, Apollo 11, Fighting with My Family, and Greta all fell out of the Top 10 this week, but the most dramatic drop was definitely Greta, which fell eight spots to #16. Audiences have good reason to watch their back, because Greta surely won’t tolerate this disrespect.

Check back with Atom Insider later this week as we preview all the new releases hitting theaters this Friday.

 

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