The latest X-Men adventure easily topped the weekend, earning an estimated $65 million. It is on pace to pull in over $76 million over the four-day spell. That’s a solid start, but a significant drop off from the $110.5 million that the previous film, X-Men: Days of Future Past, racked up over the 2014 Memorial Day holiday.
Things were much bleaker for Alice Through the Looking Glass. The follow-up to 2010’s Alice in Wonderland, which racked up more than $1 billion during its run, stumbled out of the gate, bombing with $28.1 million and a projected $35 over the four-day period. That’s a disastrous start for a film with an $170 million production budget.
The fantasy adventure will try to staunch the bleeding overseas, where Alice Through the Looking Glass grossed an estimated $65 million from such major territories as Italy, Russia, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Brazil. The film has opened in 72 percent of the international market, with France (1 June), Japan (1 July), and South Korea (8 September) still on deck.
Alices opening is bad news for Johnny Depp, whose star has waned in recent years, its luster diminished by flops such as Mortdecai and Transcendence. The actor was in the headlines over the weekend after his wife Amber Heard filed for divorce, alleging abuse.
Both new releases failed to hit tracking, with some analysts expecting X-Men: Apocalypse to debut to between $80 million and $100 million, and many box office sages projecting an Alice launch in the $55 million range. The competition appeared to take a chunk out of both film’s ticket sales.