In its second week out, Buena Vista's Disney animation, Zootopia, remains the top dog (or bunny) on the list of highest-grossing films in America. The biggest bow, however, came from Paramount's 10 Cloverfield Lane—the J.J. Abrams-produced thriller, which stars John Goodman and serves as a loose sequel to 2008's Cloverfield.
The next debuts to come close to 10 Cloverfield Lane lie directly outside the Top 5, namely Lionsgate's The Perfect Match, Focus' The Young Messiah and Sony's The Brothers Grimsby—the latest comedic effort from Sacha Baron Cohen, which fell pretty damn flat, considering critics' reviews, its 37% at Rotten Tomatoes and $3m opening.
1. Zootopia (Buena Vista) $50m 3,827/$13,065 avg. (week 2)
2. 10 Cloverfield Lane (Paramount) $25m 3,391/$7,431 avg. (debut)
3. Deadpool (Fox) $11m 3,331/$3,242 avg. (week 5)
4. London Has Fallen (Focus) $11m 3,492/$3,055 avg. (week 2)
5. Whiskey Tango Foxtrot (Paramount) $5m 2,413/$1,906 avg. (week 2)
In limited release, Bleecker Street's Eye in the Sky scored an impressive $117k across just five theaters. The film stars Helen Mirren as a military colonel, who's spearheading a secret drone mission and ultimately decides to attack a group of terrorists, but has her conscience called into question when a nine-year-old girl enters the kill zone.
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