Yet another attempt to topple Marvel’s Black Panther failed this weekend, as the film was the first to stay at number 1 for five consecutive weekends since Avatar in 2009. Meanwhile, Tomb Raider was fairly mediocre, I Can Only Imagine hugely overperformed and Love, Simon did okay numbers.

Black Panther was down 34% this weekend, its strongest hold to date. Considering it lost many IMAX and Premium screens to Tomb Raider this weekend, that number was especially impressive. It also became one of just seven films to top $600 million domestically, with plenty left in the bank. There’s seemingly a good chance that it can hold onto first place next weekend, if Pacific Rim: Uprising under performs.

Tomb Raider may have landed in first on Friday, but ultimately landed in second for the weekend with an estimated $23.5 million. While that was above my predictions, it still isn’t a particularly strong start for a $94 million adaptation of a fairly well known brand. Overseas, however, was another story; the film has already taken in more than $100 million, over $40 million of which came from China. A gross of around $250-$300 million would be solid for a film with this kind of budget, but don’t expect it to pull in more than $60 million domestically.

In third, I Can Only Imagine took in a phenomenal $17 million. On top of that, the Christian drama was released in just 1,629 theaters, giving it a massive $10.4K per theater average – the highest of any film in the top 12. Produced for just $7 million, the book adaptation should see strong holds leading up to Easter weekend.

A Wrinkle in Time was down 50% in round two, a less-than-stellar hold for a family film, though not overly shocking considering the mixed word of mouth. With many overseas markets yet to open, there’s still a chance for this to pull in some real money.

In fifth, Love, Simon scored a decent $11.5 million. Comparisons are not exactly readily available considering its status as the first LGBT centered teen drama from a major studio, so anything above $10 million has to be seen as a minor win. Despite the A+ Cinemascore, the weekend was a bit front loaded, down 10% on Saturday. This implies that it may not held terribly well in the weeks to come, and thus a total of under $30 million is likely.

Peter Rabbit crossed the century mark as it remained in the top 10 for a sixth consecutive weekend. Released on the same weekend as Fifty Shades Freed, which will cross $100 million in the next several days. Also topping an impressive goalpost was Jumanji, which finally topped $400 million after 13 weekends of release.

Last weekends horror surprise The Strangers: Prey at Night had a decent 54% drop, raising its total to $18 million after two weeks. Produced for just $5 million, this is a definite win for Aviron Pictures.

In semi-wide release, 7 Days in Entebbe underwhelmed with just $1.6 million from 838 theaters, for a week per theater average of $1.9K. That’s a similar result to Thoroughbreds, another Focus Features limited release that also failed to impress.

The other two weekends from last weekend, Hurricane Heist and Gringo had terrible holds. Hurricane Heist plummeted 66%, while Gringo was an entirely different story; the R rated comedy dissolved a whopping 77%; the fourth worst hold for a film released in 2,000 theaters.