By Chris Kavan - 04/19/15 at 11:02 PM CT
Although it took a bigger hit this weekend, Furious 7 still held on the top spot over the weekend. Even better, it crossed the $1 billion mark world-wide in record time and its place in history is assured. That meant that Paul Blart and Unfriended has to settle for runner-up status. The box office still looks good - though things are likely to wind down next weekend before Age of Ultron provides the next $1 billion offering to global audiences.
1) FURIOUS 7
2) PAUL BLART: MALL COP 2
The Kevin James comedy sequel beat out the social media horror entry for second place. With a $24 million debut, it is James' second-largest solo opening (behind the original Paul Blart at $31.8 million). The original Blart also went on to earn nearly $150 million - something Mall Cop 2 is going to fall well short of. It has the distinction of earning the rare 0% Rotten Tomatoes score - and audiences only gave it a "B-" Cinemascore. Still, Mall Cop 2 has a modest $30 million budget, so even if it does fall off quickly, it's still going to be in the black, most likely with a total around the $70 million mark.
3) UNFRIENDED
Coming in third was the social media-driven horror film, Unfriended. The film opened to $16.02 million - and on a minimal marketing effort (and likely a smaller budget) it is going to be a modest hit on its own. Audiences gave it a typical score for a horror film - a none-too-impressive "C" cinemascore and thus it is likely to fall fast and hard. It doesn't help that the audience was mostly younger (74% under 25) - a fickle crowd that tends to be front-loaded more often than not. Given all the factors, Unfriended might be able to limp to $40 million, but the result should still be okay for a low-cost horror.
4) HOME
The animated feature dropped two spots from second to fourth place. The film took in another $10.3 million (down 44.4% from last week) and now stands at $142.6 million - essentially on par with The Croods though the same point. It also was enough to blast passed its $135 million budget. The film should cross $150 million by next week and still has a shot to get to the $175 million mark before it leaves theaters.
5) THE LONGEST RIDE
The latest Nicholas Spark's adaptation took a 47.4% hit in its second weekend and dropped from third to fight place with $$6.85 million. That was a better hold than last year's The Best of Me - which dipped 57% in its second week out. Thus far, The Longest Ride has taken in $23.5 million. It has a little more time, but it's probably going to fall short of $50 million
Outside the top five: The latest film from Disneynature, Monkey Kingdom, opened in the most theaters yet for the studio (2012) but had one of the weakest debuts at just $4.72 million (behind Bears, which opened to $4.78 million). Though it is likely to get a slight bump with Earth Day coming up - Monkey Kingdom will probably be lucky to make it to $15 million.
Woman in Gold continued to expand, adding over 500 theaters and it had the best hold out of any film in the top 10, dipping just 16% and taking in $4.6 million for a new total of just under $16 million.
Coming off great reviews and an impressive limited debut, Ex Machina added 35 theaters and expanded to 39 theaters taking in $814,000 (jumping from 18th to 14th place) and a still impressive $20,872 per-theater average.
Two other limited releases didn't far as well. True Crime, with Jonah Hill and James Franco, could only manage a $1.93 million opening in 810 theaters. Even with the star power, the film is likely to earn less than $10 million. Child 44, with Gary Oldman and Tom Hardy fared much worse with just $600,000 despite playing in over 500 theaters. Expect this one to quickly exit theaters.
Next week is another calm before the big Avengers onslaught. Two dramas enter the field - Age of Adeline and Little Boy. We'll see if Furious 7 has enough gas left to top a fourth weekend in theaters.