Peter Parker's good fortune continued over the holiday weekend! Even with some mighty competition from new Matrix and Sing movies, and rising concerns over the omicron variant, 'Spider-Man: No Way Home' stayed in the No.1 spot and netted a few more milestones too including crossing the USD 1 billion mark globally. According to studio estimates, Sunday 'Spider-Man' added USD 81.5 million over the three-day weekend, down 69 per cent from its first weekend. The Sony and Marvel film has now grossed USD 467 million from North American theaters, more than doubling the domestic grosses of 2021's previous No.1 film, 'Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings.'
With USD 587.1 million from 61 overseas markets, 'Spider-Man' has grossed USD 1.05 billion globally, making it the highest earner of the pandemic. It's the first film of the pandemic to cross USD 1 billion and the second-fastest film ever to do so — and this without the benefit of China release.
Universal's 'Sing 2' came in second place with an estimated USD 23.8 million, while Warner Bros. “The Matrix Resurrections” grossed USD 12 million to take third place. The animated musical “Sing 2” features high-profile celebrity talent including Matthew McConaughey, Scarlett Johansson, Reese Witherspoon and Bono, as well as a jukebox soundtrack full of well-known hits.
Since its release Wednesday, it's made USD 41 million (USD 1.6 million of that came from Thanksgiving weekend showings) from North America and USD 65 million worldwide.
“We're extraordinarily pleased,” said Jim Orr, Universal's president of domestic distribution.
Orr said the stellar CinemaScore (A+) and audience scores suggest that the film will continue to perform well in the next few weeks, when many kids are still out of school for the holidays.
The fourth Matrix also opened on Wednesday and has earned an estimated USD 22.5 million in its first five days in North America.
The film, directed by Lana Wachowski and starring Keanu Reeves and Carrie-Anne Moss, is currently streaming on HBO Max as well. Globally, it's grossed USD 69.8 million to date.
And in fourth is Disney and 20th Century's “The King's Man,” a prequel to the action-comedy Kingsman series starring Ralph Fiennes. It came in slightly under expectations with USD 10 million from its first five days. The audience skewed heavily male (65 per cent).
The Kurt Warner biopic “American Underdog” opened on Christmas Day and has made an estimated USD 6.2 million in its two days in release. Zachary Levi stars as Warner, the quarterback who went from undrafted free agent to Hall of Famer.
Paul Thomas Anderson's “Licorice Pizza” expanded nationwide on Christmas, after playing in limited release for a month, and added USD 2.3 million bringing its total to USD 3.7 million.