Ant-Man and the Wasp pulled in an opening that could only be described as ‘servicable’, as the Marvel sequel absorbed a hugely front loaded $76 million over its three day frame. Meanwhile, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom surpassed $1 billion worldwide, and Incredibles 2 became the highest grossing animated film of all time.

Ant-Man and the Wasp topped the box office with $76 million, a whopping $33 million of which came from Friday alone, as well as $11.5 of that coming from Thursday previews. Between this and the A- Cinemascore (slightly below average for a Marvel title) it seems safe to assume that this sequel will be very front loaded, and may even miss the $200 million mark domestically. While it definitely didn’t need to hit $100 million to be considered a success, it’s hard to not see this as at least somewhat of a disappointment, especially considering the massive success of Avengers: Infinity War.

The explanation for this discrepancy can be noticed in the marketing; considering the titular characters were nowhere to be found in Infinity War, the trailers and commercials essentially sold the film as a joke, focusing on action sequences based around growing and shrinking different objects without selling a compelling or unique plot. Because of that, there wasn’t exactly a ton of demand built up from its generally well liked-but-not-loved predecessor, leading to a somewhat underwhelming debut. Still, Marvel knew this wouldn’t be a massive blockbuster and kept the budget at $160 million, so it should still profit at the end of the day.

Also opening was Universal’s The First Purge, which has pulled in a great $31 million since its Wednesday debut. For the weekend, however, it was in fourth with $17 million. The prequel to the thriller franchise scored a B- Cinemascore, though it is a series known for being quite front loaded, and as a result there’s a decent chance that this latest Purge doesn’t make it to $60 million domestically, especially with fellow Blumhouse competitor Unfriended: Dark Web set to hit theaters in just two weeks.

Among the weekend holdovers, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom fell an additional 53% in its third outing, likely as a result of losing its premium theaters and IMAX screens to Ant-Man. With $333 million in the bank, the dino-sequel should approach $400 million, but considering it has already hit a billion, this franchise is almost entirely an overseas play at this point. Incredibles 2 surpassed $500 million domestically in record time, becoming the first animated film to do so without inflation, and one of the very few to surpass it with inflation. Additionally, Sicario: Day of the Soldado plummeted an awful 61% in its second weekend, likely a result of the built in audience of its predecessor combined with polarizing word of mouth. Uncle Drew fared a bit better, but was still down a sharp 57% in its sophomore outing. The two films are up to $35 and $29 million respectively.

Moving into the specialty market, Roadside Attractions opened their music documentary Whitney into 425 locations and scored a decent $1.2 million opening. Won’t You Be My Neighbor? continued its expansion into 893 locations – massive for any documentary – and climbed up another spot into 9th place, with an estimate $2.5 million. So far, Focus Features’ doc has pulled in nearly $13 million. Annapurna opened Sorry to Bother You in just 16 locations and scored an excellent $717K, dialing a per theater average of $44K. The surrealist comedy will hit nationwide release next weekend, against the limited opening of A24’s heavily buzzed comedy Eighth Grade.