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Box office receipts

'Coco' three-peats at No. 1 with $18.3M at the weekend box office

Lindsey Bahr
The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — The animated family film Coco has topped the box office for a third time on a quiet, pre-Star Wars: The Last Jedi weekend in theaters.

Disney estimated Sunday that Pixar's Day of the Dead-themed hit added $18.3 million, bringing its domestic total to $135.5 million.

The weekend's sole new wide release was the Morgan Freeman film Just Getting Started, which launched to a meager $3.2 million and barely made the top 10.

Most studios have chosen to avoid competing against The Last Jedi, which is expected to dominate theaters and moviegoer attention when it opens Friday (theaters will start showing it Thursday night).

Hector (voiced by Gael Garcia Bernal, left) and Miguel (Anthony Gonzalez) are traveling buddies in Pixar's animated 'Coco.'

Thus, most of the charts have looked quite similar for the past few weeks. DC Films' superhero ensemble movie Justice League took second place with $9.6 million. The sleeper hit Wonder, starring Julia Roberts and Jacob Tremblay, passed $100 million, placing third with $8.5 million.

This quiet period before Star Wars has allowed some of the indie and prestige titles to thrive in limited releases and expansions, like James Franco's The Disaster Artist. The film, about the making of one of the worst films of all time, The Room, expanded to 840 locations in its second weekend in theaters. It managed to bring in $6.4 million, landing it in fourth place.

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Greta Gerwig's coming-of-age film Lady Bird also added 363 locations and placed ninth in its sixth weekend in theaters. With $3.5 million from this weekend, Lady Bird has netted $22.3 million.

The Guillermo del Toro-directed romantic fantasy The Shape of Water expanded to 41 theaters in its second weekend and earned $1.1 million.

Margot Robbie's Tonya Harding biopic I, Tonya launched in four locations in New York and Los Angeles and brought in a solid $245,600.

Margot Robbie stars as controversial figure skater Tonya Harding in 'I, Tonya.'

The Winston Churchill film Darkest Hour and the summer romance film Call Me By Your Name also continue to thrive in more limited releases as well. Darkest Hour, which stars Gary Oldman as Churchill, earned $777,000 from 53 locations, and Call Me By Your Name, with Armie Hammer and Timothée Chalamet, took in $291,100 from nine theaters.

"This is the best time to be a moviegoer if you're an indie fan," said comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabedian. "The last few weeks have enabled films like The Shape of Water, Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri and now I, Tonya to really find an audience."

He added: "It's great time for those films ahead of the box-office Death Star that is Star Wars."

The year is still down 4% from last year, which is a pit that even a juggernaut like Star Wars might struggle to fill. The cash influx from The Last Jedi will be significant, though, and if the precedent of Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and The Force Awakens holds, it could range from $400 million to more than $600 million of additional domestic revenue before the books close on 2017.

Final figures are expected Monday.

Contributing: Kim Willis

 

 

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