By Chris Kavan - 06/05/16 at 08:59 PM CT
In yet another underwhelming display of unoriginality, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows joins X-Men Apocalypse as being the top movie of the weekend yet still having disappointing results. It seems sequilitis is affecting the box office this month and I don't know if the summer will bring any better news. In any case, the best news of the weekend didn't belong to the top film but rather a surprisingly strong showing from Me Before You proving that female audiences are happy to drive the box office.
1) TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: OUT OF THE SHADOWS
2) X-MEN: APOCALYPSE
The X-Men are going to have to face the music as well, as Apocalypse dropped a hefty 66.1% in its second weekend out, bringing in $22.3 million for the weekend and a new total of $116.5 million. While the drop is big - it is right in line with previous X-Men films as First Class dropped 66.9% and Days of Future Past dipped 64% in their respective second weekends. Still, the film is looking to be one of the weakest X-Men films to date. It should finish in the $155-$165 million range finishing just above the first X-Men film for 6th out of 9th place. It is doing robust business internationally ($400 million and counting), so the news isn't all bad but domestically, it had to be seen as a disappointment, though I doubt the X-Men brand will be going away anytime soon.
3) ME BEFORE YOU
Never doubt the power of women. Me Before You, which I expected to be on the lower end of the fop five, if it was lucky, did much better than expected with a third-place opening of $18.2 million. That almost topped its $20 million budget on opening weekend. And yes, women led the charge, making up 81% of the audience (53% under 35) and they awarded it a great "A" Cinemascore. Seeing as there are pretty much no romantic films on the near horizon, Me Before You should have an excellent run with a total around the $50 million mark. These films tend not to have a huge international audience, but even a small addition will make the results all the more sweeter. And I guess it helps break the curse of Game of Thrones actors choosing poorly (Pixels Peter Dinklage, Gods of Egypt Mr. Coster-Waldau? Terminator Genisys Khaleesa?) when it comes to movie roles. I will never in my life see this movie, but I wish it all the luck and hope it has a good, long run if only to make date night so much better.
4) ALICE THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
If X-Men took a big tumble, it was in good company with Through the Looking Glass. The Alice in Wonderland sequel also took a big his, dropping over 60% from its uninspired opening. With just $10.6 million in its second weekend, the live-action film has a depressing $50.77 million total. It it's lucky, it will hit $75 million domestically and even with $176 million worldwide this has to be seen as, if not an outright bomb, certainly a pretty major disappointment for Disney's live action department. I don't think it will affect any future properties but I do think we have seen the last of Alice for quite awhile. I expect this to continue falling rapidly and we'll see how far it goes into this month.
5) ANGRY BIRDS
Those Angry Birds aren't giving up yet. With a $9.77 million weekend (off about 48% from last week) the mobile-game turned animated movie had earned $86.6 million thus far. It is within striking distance of the $90 million Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time to become the second-highest grossing video game adaptation of all time (domestic) though it is looking like it will fade before catching Tomb Raider ($131 million). Still, on the worldwide front it has made $273 million and will soon pass both Tomb Raider ($274 million) and Resident Evil: Afterlife ($296 million) and will sit only behind Prince of Persia ($336 million) as the video game king. I'm still hoping Warcraft will make its mark.
Outside the top five: Andy Samberg and the Lonely Isle may have found some love from critics, but couldn't catch a break from audiences. Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping opened in 8th place with just $4.63 million - lower than the $5.3 million Hot Rod opened with back in 2007. Despite a plethora of cameos the R rating may have kept away the younger audience it was craving. This one is likely to be out in a week or two, so if you are so inclined see it now while you can.
Big news for Zootopia - Disney's animated Juggernaut crossed $1 billion worldwide - only the fourth animated film of all time to hit that mark and the second film for Disney (behind Captain America: Civil War) to do so in 2016. With Finding Dory on the way, Disney may have to $1 billion animated films in one year.
Before that, however, next week brings us the horror sequel The Conjuring 2 (which may be just as good, if not better than the original - color me hopeful), another sequel in the magic caper Now You See Me 2 and the aforementioned Warcraft - we'll see if it can outdo Angry Birds or not.