Disney was unable to take down their own competition, as Black Panther became the first film since The Force Awakens to be in first place for four weekends in a row. Meanwhile, A Wrinkle in Time underwhelmed, The Strangers sequel overperformed, while Gringo and The Hurricane Heist flopped.

Black Panther remained in first with an additional $41.1 million, pushing it past the billion dollar mark worldwide. That makes it the first MCU film without Iron Man to top that goalpost. If it can keep first place away from Tomb Raider next weekend (it will) then it will become the first film since The Sixth Sense to hold first for five consecutive weekends. Currently, the domestic gross is up to a whopping $561 million, and without much strong competition in the way, that $700 million mark is looking completely possible.

In second, A Wrinkle in Time stumbled with a $33.3 million debut. That was more or less on par with my predictions, but was unfortunately a good bit below the $40-45 million tracking range leading up to release. Poor reviews and word of mouth (B Cinemascore) will keep it from having a long run, but there’s still a slim chance that this tops the century mark if it doesn’t plummet next weekend.

In third, The Strangers: Prey at Night landed above expectations with a solid $10.5 million start. Produced for just $5 million and released under the fledgling Aviron Pictures banner, whose only other wide release was Kidnap, another low budget thriller that opened on a similar level. This will likely wind up being fairly front loaded as most slasher sequels tend to be.

In fourth, Red Sparrow dropped 51% to $8.1 million. After two weeks, the R rated spy thriller has made around $82 million worldwide, and still has a long way to go before any hopes of turning a profit.

Game Night saw another strong weekend, down just 25% to $7.9 million. With $45 million in the bank so far, this is a definite win for Warner Brothers.

Peter Rabbit and Death Wish were very close, with $6.8 and $6.6 million respectively. Rabbit will be closing in on the century mark very soon, while Death Wish will likely scrape by $30 million by the end of its run.

Universal opened its indie thriller Thoroughbreds in a fairly high 549 theaters. Generally, the bar for something considered wide release is around 600. The film took in an okay $1.2 million, averaging around $2.2K per site. That’s not exactly a flop, but it’s also not the kind of numbers that justify it expanding any further.

Two questionable wide releases, The Hurricane Heist and Gringo both opened in over 2,400 theaters, and both landed with a dud. Heist managed to take 8th place with about $3.1 million, while Gringo flopped outside the top 10 with just $2.6 million. Both of these were from smaller independent studios who have struggled to put out consistent successes, yet both still have a number of releases still scheduled throughout the year.