On one of the quietest weekends of the year in movie theaters, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever topped the North American box office for the fifth straight weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday.

With the release of Avatar: The Way of Water looming, studios opted not to open any new films in wide release. That enabled Ryan Cooglers Black Panther sequel to further extend its box-office reign. Wakanda Forever grossed $11.1 million over the weekend, bringing its domestic total to $409.8 million and its worldwide haul to $767.8 million.

Wakanda Forever is the first film since Christopher Nolans Tenet  the 2020 release that attempted to revive cinemas from pandemic closure in 2020, when almost nothing was being theatrically released to lead the box-office for five straight weeks.

While its common to see a quiet weekend ahead of a potential blockbuster like The Way of Water, a little-challenged run like Wakanda Forever is enjoying is rare for this time of year. The holiday corridor from Thanksgiving to New Years is typically one of Hollywoods busiest periods. Instead, its been a fallow spell, with one of the weakest Thanksgiving weekends ever and only a dribble of wide releases since.

The weekends total ticket sales amounted to just $37 million, according to data firm Comscore.

Thats left the industry looking, once again, to James Cameron to fire up the box office. Avatar: The Way of Water, the long-awaited sequel to the $2.9-billion-grossing 2009 original, launches in theaters Thursday with expectations of at least a $150 million debut domestically.

Violent Night, the R-rated comic action film starring David Harbour as Santa Claus, held well in its second weekend. It stayed in second place, dropping a modest 29%, with $8.7 million.

While many awards hopefuls have struggled to catch on in theaters, Darren Aronofskys The Whale, starring Brendan Fraser, got off to a strong start. The A24 release grossed $360,000 at six theaters for the years best per-screen average. Fraser has been widely celebrated for his performance as a 600-lb. reclusive English teacher trying to reconnect with his estranged daughter (Sadie Sink).

In its second weekend, Focus Features Spoiler Alert, a romantic comedy starring Jim Parsons and directed by Michael Showalter, expanded into 1,100 theaters but came away with just $700,000 in ticket sales. Sam Mendes Empire of Light, for Searchlight Pictures, debuted in 110 locations but also failed to make a dent. The film, set in a 1980s coastal England movie theater and starring Olivia Colman, took in $152,000.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Comscore. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1.Black Panther: Wakanda Forever, $11.1 million.

2. Violent Night, $8.7 million.

3. Strange World, $3.6 million.

4. The Menu, $2.7 million.

5. Devotion, $2 million.

6. Black Adam, $1.3 million.

7. The Fabelmans, $1.2 million.

8. The Hours (Metropolitan Opera), $791,000.

9. I Heard the Bells, $751,000.

10. Spoiler Alert, $700,000.

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