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Coco tops US box office for second straight week

New York — In a sleepy post-Thanksgiving weekend at the box office, Pixar's Coco remained the top film for the second straight week while a number of Oscar contenders packed theatres in specialty release.

Coco again easily led all films with $26.1m in the U.S. and Canada, according to studio estimates on Sunday. The acclaimed animated tale based on the Mexican holiday Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) has dominated new releases both domestically and abroad. It has already racked up a global gross of $280m, including record-breaking totals in Mexico and an impressive $75.6m in China.

With no major wide releases, Warner Bros.' Justice League also held in second place with $16.6m in its third weekend. With a domestic total of $197.3m in three weeks, the DC Comics superhero team-up release isn't going to catch Marvel's Thor: Ragnarok. The better-received Thor sequel has proved far mightier, with nearly $300m in five weeks of release.

The family film Wonder, about a fifth-grade boy (Jacob Tremblay) with facial abnormalities, likewise stayed in third with $12.5m. The sleeper hit of the season, also starring Julia Roberts and Owen Wilson, has taken in $88m in three weeks for Lionsgate.

Among new releases, most successful was James Franco's The Disaster Artist. The comedy opened with $1.2m on 19 screens, good for a per-screen average of $64 254. The film, directed by and starring Franco, is about the making of the infamously bad cult movie The Room.


With most studios staying clear ahead of the impending release of Star Wars: The Last Jedi (which some forecasts peg for a $200-m debut), much of the weekend's action was with awards-season releases. They helped drive the weekend to the biggest post-Thanksgiving weekend in five years, according to comScore.

Greta Gerwig's Lady Bird, which spent the week collecting honours from the New York Film Critics Circle, the Gotham Awards and the National Board of Review, added 403 theatres, for a total of 1 194. The A24 release, starring Saoirse Ronan and Laurie Metcalf, earned $4.5m, bringing its total to $17.1m.

Fox Searchlight's The Shape of Water, an acclaimed monster-movie fantasy from director Guillermo del Toro, opened in two New York theatres with $167,000. (The $83,400 per-screen average ranks as among the best of the year.) Searchlight's Thee Billboards Outside of Ebbing, Missouri, also expanded to 1 630 screens and grossed $4.5m. The Frances McDormand-led film has grossed $13.7m.

The coming-of-age tale Call Me By Your Name, which topped the Gotham Awards on Monday, remained in very limited release — four theatres — and pulled in an excellent per-screen average of $67,000. The Sony Pictures Classics last weekend debuted with the highest screen-average of the year. The film's young star, Timothee Chalamet, has emerged as one the leading best-actor contenders.

Also of note: Woody Allen's latest, Wonder Wheel, opened with $140 555 in five theatres; Focus Feature's Winston Churchill biopic Darkest Hour took in $106 000 in four theatres; and the 20th anniversary release of Titanic grossed $415 000 in 87 theatres.

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