‘Weapons’ regains the top spot as the summer box office winds down

LOS ANGELES (AP) โ€”ย โ€œWeaponsโ€ย found its way back on top during the Labor Day weekend, culminating a summer box office that’s likely to fall right below meeting last year’s earnings.

Zach Cregger’s horrorย proved its staying power as aย late-summer viral successย and regained the top spot after last weekend sawย โ€œKpop Demon Huntersโ€ย giveย Netflixย itsย first box-office win. โ€œWeaponsโ€ generated $10.2 million during its fourth weekend in theaters.

Universalโ€™s 50th rerelease of โ€œJawsโ€ย also made a splash in theaters, securing the second spot.ย Steven Spielbergโ€™s 1975 filmย took โ€œa bite out of the box office,โ€ said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for the data firm Comscore, earning $8.1 million in 3,200 North American theaters.

โ€œHow appropriate that a movie thatโ€™s celebrating its 50 years, an all-time classic, Jaws, should be as relevant today as it was when it opened,โ€ Dergarabedian said. โ€œItโ€™s so great because we need every dollar to contribute to the bottom line for this summer.โ€

The rerelease helped boost a summer with earnings likely coming in at $3.7 billion, just under last summer. Still, this year will miss the typical pre-pandemic summer box office benchmark of $4 billion, Dergarabedian said.

โ€œThere were casualties this summer. Itโ€™s a very crowded summer, very competitive,โ€ Dergarabedian said. โ€œAt the end of the day, you canโ€™t get to that four billion mark unless every movie just clicked and is performing at or above expectations.โ€

This summer’s earnings were front-loaded, with May releases likeย โ€œThunderboltsโ€ย andย โ€œLilo & Stitchโ€ย becoming box office wins. However, the latter half of the summer struggled despiteย the success of movies like โ€œWeapons.”

Dergarabedian said the summer succeeded in provided high-quality movies and marketing, but it’s โ€œkind of limping a bit to the finish line in terms of the summer movie season.โ€

The crime caperย โ€œCaught Stealing,โ€ย starring Austin Butler, generated $7.8 million domestically and snatched third place its debut weekend. Set in 1998 and directed byย Darren Aronofsky, the film follows Butler as a New York City bartender who is unexpectedly wrapped up the city’s crime world.

โ€œFreakier Friday,โ€ย which debuted alongside โ€œWeaponsโ€ early this month for a successful humor/horror double feature, took fourth place, earning $6.5 million domestically.ย โ€œThe Roses,โ€ย another newcomer, came in fifth with $6.4 million.

โ€œThe Fantastic Four: First Steps”ย landed in sixth place with $4.8 million. The Marvel superhero film hit box office gold during its late July entry,ย debuting at $118 million. The film, however,ย experienced a downward trend in earnings since its release.

โ€œThe Bad Guys 2″ย came in just below โ€œFirst Steps,โ€ with $4.7 million, followed byย โ€œSuperman,โ€ย an early July entry that generated $2.6 million during the Labor Day weekend.

Top 10 movies by domestic box office

With final domestic figures being released Monday, this list factors in the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore:

1. โ€œWeapons,โ€ $10.2 million.

2. โ€œJaws (1975),โ€ $8.1 million.

3. โ€œCaught Stealing,โ€ $7.8 million.

4. โ€œFreakier Friday,โ€ $6.5 million.

5. โ€œThe Roses,โ€ $6.4 million.

6. โ€œThe Fantastic Four: First Steps,โ€ $4.8 million.

7. โ€œThe Bad Guys 2,” $4.7 million.

8. โ€œSuperman,โ€ $2.6 million.

9. โ€œNobody 2,โ€ $1.8 million.

10. โ€œThe Naked Gun,โ€ $1.8 million.