Disney/Marvel’s Eternals repeated its North American box office win this weekend with $27.5 million, down 61% from its original debut of $71.3 million.
In second place is Clifford, the Big Red Dog. The film has collected $16.42 million in three days and $22 million since opening on Wednesday, beating the studio’s five-day forecast of $15-17 million. Interestingly, the family-friendly adaptation of the beloved children’s book series made its debut on the streaming platform Paramount+, taking a bite out of its theatrical collections. Still, it’s a good start for the long-delayed film, which had its first day in theaters on Wednesday (when it opened on 3,407 screens) to take advantage of the Veterans Day holiday on Thursday, when many children had the day off. On Friday, the number of screens expanded. up to 3700.
In its fourth weekend of release, Dune confirmed its strong position, falling only 29% to $5.5 million in third place. The Warner Bros. film appears to benefit from being able to see it on the biggest screen (it was shot specifically for the IMAX format, where the film has thrived), despite its simultaneous debut on HBO Max. With $93.13 million to date, the sci-fi epic could cross the $100 million mark in the coming weeks.
No Time to Die also fared well in its sixth weekend of release, falling just 24% to $4.62 million, good for fourth place. The latest film in actor Daniel Craig’s James Bond franchise has grossed $150.48 million to date, making it the sixth highest-grossing Bond film of all time in North America.
Another October blockbuster, Venom: Let There Be Carnage, took fifth place with $4 million in its seventh weekend.
Belfast, rumored as an Oscar contender, took eighth place on 580 screens with $1.8 million.
Overseas, it grossed around $48 million in 49 countries, including #1 in Indonesia ($3.3 million) and the UAE ($1.3 million), and #1 in Russia, where it grossed 2.9 million dollars after the nation’s movie theaters fully reopened across the country. Top overseas territories to date include Korea ($22 million), the United Kingdom ($14.3 million), France ($11.5 million) and Mexico ($10.2 million). Its international cume to date is $162.6 million (excluding China, where a release date has not been determined) and its global cume is $281.4 million. No Time to Die continued its strong overseas haul with an estimated $23.94 million in 72 countries.
It opened at No. 1 in Australia with $8.2M, No Time to Die also added $4.4M in China for a total of $57.94M. $2.2 million in Germany ($70.5 million total), $2.05 million in the UK and Ireland ($126.05 million total). Venom: Let There Be Carnage grossed around $7.7 million in 55 countries, bringing its overseas total to $238.8 million and its worldwide total to $441.5 million. Dune grossed around $6.8 million overseas, including $1.6 million in the UK and $1.4 million in Korea. The film’s international cume now stands at $258.1 million and the film’s domestic total is $351.2 million. To date, the leading territories are China ($38 million), France ($30.7 million), Great Britain ($26 million), Germany ($21.4 million) and Russia ($21.1 million ).