Warner Bros. | Angel Studios
āA Minecraft Movieā was assured to reign supreme at the domestic box office in its second weekend, but theaters are also getting buttressed with several more new releases, too. Of those, Angel Studiosā animated biblical film āThe King of Kingsā is leading the pack, heading for second place ahead of titles from major studios like āThe Amateurā and āDrop.ā
At the top of the charts, Warner Bros. and Legendaryās āA Minecraft Movieā keeps stacking blocks, notching another $20.5 million on Friday. The comedy adaptation of Mojangās video game bestseller is expected to earn north of $80 million in its second frame, which would rank as the third-biggest weekend gross of the year behind its own smash $162 million opening and not far off from the $88 million debut of Disneyās āCaptain America: Brave New World.ā Talk about a block-buster.
Now projecting a drop around 50%, āMinecraftā likely wonāt match the superlative holds put up by titles like fellow video game adaptation āThe Super Mario Bros. Movieā (a 36% second-weekend fall) or Warnerās other IP breakout āBarbieā (a 42% slide). But itās impressive staying power nonetheless, demonstrating that āMinecraftā has crossed over beyond the propertyās built-in fanbase that rushed to buy tickets on opening weekend. Plus, it only took seven days for āA Minecraft Movieā to surpass a $200 million domestic gross and solidify its status as the yearās top-grossing North American release. Now itās just a matter of how high it can build.
Even with a PG-rated juggernaut topping the market, animated film āThe King of Kingsā is proving a competitive option for family audiences, landing in second place on domestic charts. The Korea-produced feature, a loose adaptation of Charles Dickensā āThe Life of Our Lord,ā earned about $6.8 million across Friday and preview screenings from more than 3,200 locations. Angel is also offering a āKids Go Freeā initiative to boost attendance among families, allowing children no-cost admittance with the purchase of one adult ticket. Competitors now project the film is headed to an opening around $18 million.
If it overperforms a bit, it could even land the biggest opening ever for independent distributor Angel Studios, which last made a big splash with the R-rated human trafficking thriller āSound of Freedomā in July 2023. That film debuted to $19 million before legging out a staggering $184 million domestic finish, outgrossing major Hollywood summer blockbusters like āIndiana Jones and the Dial of Destinyā and āMission: Impossible ā Dead Reckoning.ā In the two years since, Angel has been a more quiet, though still a regular presence in theaters, releasing modest dramas, often with a faith-based message. Their biggest hit after āFreedomā was last Decemberās apocalypse thriller āHomestead,ā which earned $20 million domestic and featured an abrupt ending that teased a television sequel series for Angelās streaming service.
With āKing of Kingsā outpacing traditional studio releases, the animated feature looks to become Angelās second-biggest hit ever in just a few days, with an eye on next weekendās Easter holiday to boost business. The film, which features the voice of Oscar Isaac as Jesus Christ and boasts other names like Pierce Brosnan, Mark Hamill, Forest Whitaker, Ben Kingsley, Kenneth Branagh and Uma Thurman, has so-so reviews. But Angel always resonates with its target audience; moviegoer survey firm Cinema Scoreās pristine āA+ā grade would indicate that theyāve done that again.
Of the other new openings, āThe Amateurā is drawing the biggest crowd, with the Rami Malek revenge thriller earning $6 million across Friday and preview screenings from 3,400 locations, now hoping for a three-day north of $15 million. The Disney release, under its 20th Century Studios banner, is sharing Imax and other premium large-format auditoriums with āMinecraftā and A24ās āWarfareā this weekend. Directed by James Hawes, the PG-13 vigilante film cost $60 million to produce and will have to stick around theaters to fully justify that price point. Reviews have been mixed, but audiences are more positive (a āB+ā grade from Cinema Score).
Fourth and fifth are a tighter race, though the real-time Iraq thriller āWarfareā has the edge for now, earning about $3.5 million across Friday and preview screenings from 2,670 theaters, eyeing an $8 million debut. The R-rated military ensemble piece sees filmmaker Alex Garland reteam with A24 after both launched a breakout hit with āCivil Warā a year ago. Co-directed by veteran Ray Mendoza, āWarfareā was a cheaper production than most studio films, though on the pricier side by A24 standards. The indie banner will hope to turn stellar reviews and great audience sentiment (an āA-ā grade from Cinema Score) into a sustained theatrical run.
Universalās modern suspense thriller āDropā isnāt too far behind, earning $3.3 million across Friday and preview screenings from 3,085 locations, heading to a $7.7 million debut. The PG-13 Blumhouse production, which teams āWhite Lotusā breakout Meghann Fahy and āIt Ends With Usā star Brandon Sklenar on a first date gone terribly wrong, cost $11 million to produce and will aim to buoy its box office with great reviews. Cinema Score turned in a more measured āBā grade among moviegoers for the Christopher Landon-directed feature.
Just outside the top five, Fathom Events is bowing its third and final package of episodes for āThe Chosen: Last Supperā this weekend. This bunch earned $2.5 million across Friday and previews. The specialty banner has broken up Season 5 of 5&2 Studiosā Biblical adaptation into three theatrical releases, with finale Episodes 7-8 coming this frame. The first two bundles, which debuted over the two weeks prior, have collectively earned more than $28 million so far.