USA TODAY US Edition

‘The Jungle Book’ is king of the hill again

- Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

Walt Disney’s The Jungle Book dominated the box office, winning the crown for the third weekend in a row with $42.4 million, according to studio estimates.

The PG-rated family film dispatched three new releases, including Key and Peele’s cat comedy Keanu, Garry Marshall’s ensemble movie Mother’s Day and and the video game-inspired Ratchet & Clank.

Jungle Book and its live-action retelling of Rudyard Kipling ’s classic stories now has collected $252 million domestical­ly and $432 million overseas for a global total that exceeds $684 million.

“The Jungle Book has three wins over three weekends, taking on every newcomer. It’s unexpected just how big a hit this has become and how it has had this kind of box office hold,” says Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for comScore.com. “But it was helped by a weekend that was not strong for newcomers.” The Huntsman: Winter’s War took second in its second weekend with $9.39 million. The fantasy follow-up to 2012’s Snow White

& the Huntsman has earned $34 million after 10 days.

Keanu, which teams Keegan- Michael Key and Jordan Peele, fell into third by a cat’s nose with $9.35 million. The R-rated comedy about the duo trying to recover a beloved cat received 75% positive critical ratings on the aggregate site RottenToma­toes.com and a flat B grade from audiences on CinemaScor­e.

Mother’s Day, starring Julia Roberts, Jennifer Aniston and Kate Hudson each in mother-themed stories, took fourth place with $8.3 million. The third holiday-themed feature from director Marshall, following 2010’s Valen

tine’s Day and 2011’s New Year’s Eve, was reviled by critics; just 8% liked it at Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences gave the comedy a B-plus. The PG-13 comedy Barbershop:

The Next Cut rounded out the top five with $6.1 million in its third weekend ($44.7 million total).

The weekend’s other newcomer, Ratchet & Clank, ended up seventh with $4.8 million. Sylvester Stallone brought star voice power to the animated movie, but it was a critical dud, scoring a lowly 19% on Rotten Tomatoes.

Exhibitor Relations analyst Jeff Bock says the poor performanc­e of the three new films showed how slow the box office can be at the end of April. “There’s no way around it: These three films flopped.” But next weekend’s opening of Captain

America: Civil War will prove the slowdown is just temporary, he says. The Disney/Marvel film launched internatio­nally this weekend with $200 million. “Next weekend, it’s all about

Captain America,” he says. “It’s going to really kick off the summer.”

Final weekend numbers are expected Monday.

 ?? DISNEY ?? Mowgli (Neel Sethi), King Louie (voice of Christophe­r Walken) and Jungle Book rack up their third No. 1.
DISNEY Mowgli (Neel Sethi), King Louie (voice of Christophe­r Walken) and Jungle Book rack up their third No. 1.
 ?? STEVE DIETL ?? Rell (Jordan Peele) has a fuzzy new best friend in Keanu.
STEVE DIETL Rell (Jordan Peele) has a fuzzy new best friend in Keanu.

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