Star Wars: The Last Jedi topped the North American box office in its second weekend with an estimated $68.5 million, but it also plummeted a steep 68.9% from its $220 million debut . Despite this nasty drop, The Last Jedi will finish the three-day weekend at $745.4 million worldwide and $365.1 million domestic after just ten days in release.

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1. Star Wars: The Last Jedi $68.5 million

2. Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle $34 million

3. Pitch Perfect 3 $20.5 million

4. The Greatest Showman $8.6 million

5. Ferdinand $7.1 million

6. Coco $5.2 million

7. Downsizing $4.6 million

8. Darkest Hour $4.1 million

9. Father Figures $3.2 million

10. The Shape of Water $3.1 million

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Now for the dark side of this news. The Last Jedi "lost more money between its first and second weekends than any film ever, by a lot," as Forbes put it. The film's $151 million drop is a greater gap than the $121 million between the first two weekends of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part II.This puts Last Jedi in what Forbes dubs the $100 Million Losers Club for "a still-rare group of films that opened so high and then dropped so hard that they made over $100m less on their second weekend than their first." This group includes Avengers: Age of Ultron, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, and Jurassic World.Industry projections still peg The Last Jedi as finishing its theatrical run north of $1 billion worldwide and $600+ million domestic. If those projections pan out then The Last Jedi would become the No. 1 domestic release of 2017 ahead of another Disney title, Beauty and the Beast ($504 million).Yes, that's not Force Awakens money ($936.7 million domestic/$2.1 billion worldwide) but Disney won't be selling their stuff on eBay anytime soon to pay the rent. They're now the only studio to reach $6 billion twice at the global box office.The weekend's biggest new release was Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, which finished in second place with an estimated three-day haul of $34 million (and a total of $50.6 million since opening Wednesday.) The weekend's second biggest debut was Pitch Perfect 3, with an estimated $20.5 million opening for third place.The weekend's three other major new releases all struggled. The Hugh Jackman musical The Greatest Showman finished the three-day Christmas weekend with an estimated $8.6 million for fourth place. Downsizing, starring Matt Damon, had a tiny seventh place debut of roughly $4.6 million, while Father Figures opened in ninth place with an estimated $3.2 million.Here are the three-day weekend estimates for the North American box office via comScore