Kung Fu Panda 4 Delivers One-Two Punch to Retain Box Office Crown

Animated Sequel and Sci-Fi Epic Bout for Box Office Supremacy as New Releases Struggle

Kung Fu Panda 4

In a pitched battle between two heavyweights, Dreamworks Animation’s Kung Fu Panda 4 landed a narrow but decisive blow against Denis Villeneuve’s Dune: Part Two to retain the domestic box office championship for a second consecutive weekend.

The animated martial arts comedy collected an estimated $30 million in its sophomore frame, fending off the $29.1 million earned by the big-budget sci-fi sequel despite the latter’s hotter reviews and cultural cachet. Kung Fu Panda 4’s haul represented a strong 48% decline from its $57.1 million debut, while Dune slid 37% from last weekend following a leggy run at the top of the charts.

The panda edged past the sandworm thanks to a vastly wider 4,067 theater count compared to Dune’s 3,847 venues. Overall, both films displayed impressive endurance amid an otherwise muted marketplace, with little in the way of new competition to shake up the top rankings.

Kung Fu Panda 4’s $107.7 million 10-day domestic total puts it on a similar trajectory as the first two entries in the beloved DreamWorks franchise based on the ancient Chinese art of kung fu, starring the voice of Jack Black as an enthusiastic panda warrior. It continues a string of commercial and critical successes for the revered animation studio following last year’s hits The Bad Guys and Puss in Boots: The Last Wish.

Dune: Part Two’s domestic receipts have now surpassed $205.3 million after 17 days as it builds upon its predecessor’s strong commercial reception despite facing mixed reviews from critics. The film is expected to end its run in the vicinity of $275 million, a relatively solid result for the $200 million+ production.

In a distant third place, Lionsgate’s Mark Wahlberg family comedy Arthur the King stumbled out of the gate with a lackluster $7.5 million debut. The PG-rated film about a race truck driver and his canine co-pilot failed to entice family audiences or capitalize on its oddball premise and marketing.

Brian Robbins’ horror film Imaginary took fourth place with $5.6 million in its second weekend, claiming a $19 million total through Sunday. Biopic Cabrini rounded out the top 5 with $2.8 million.

A24’s Love Lies Bleeding surged to sixth place with $2.5 million after expanding to 1,362 locations, while Bob Marley documentary One Love hung around in seventh with $2.3 million. Focus’ indie drama The American Society of Magical Negroes and Bleecker Street’s Anthony Hopkins vehicle One Life opened softly in eighth and ninth places respectively.

Overall ticket sales amounted to approximately $89 million, maintaining a relatively steady holding pattern as the industry awaits the next potential box office breakout.

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