While the summer may be drawing to a close, audiences still had time for one last sleeper hit as Crazy Rich Asians surpassed expectations en route to an excellent $34 million five day start. Meanwhile, STX’s Mile 22 underperformed, while Alpha opened a bit above tracking.

Crazy Rich Asians raked in an estimated $25.2 million over the three day weekend, with an additional $8.7 million from its weekday start. That kind of holding power for a five day opening is very impressive, and signifies the film will likely hold quite well in the coming weeks. On top of that impressive weekend multiplier is the A CinemaScore, suggesting this is the kind of crowd pleaser that could play well into September. While a domestic total over $100 million is by no means guaranteed, it’s also entirely possible at this stage. More realistically, however, the film will earn around $80-90 million domestic – a great result considering its $30 million price tag.

Moving into second was last weekends winner The Meg, which was down 53% to $21.1 million. That’s an okay hold, especially considering this is essentially how much it was expected to open to last weekend. The shark thriller has reeled in $83.7 million in ten days, though the real story is its excellent overseas results, where it has already grossed over $230 million. From here, The Meg will likely sneak past Rampage to land a spot just outside the top 10 for the year, with a chance it goes closer to $500 million worldwide if everything really works out. It’s also worth noting (just to rub salt in the wound) that the film will likely surpass the worldwide total of Solo by the end of its run.

STX opened their action thriller Mile 22 into a very wide 3,520 locations – including IMAX and Dolby – yet failed to impress with just $13.6 million. With a budget of $35 million, this definitely isn’t a complete flop, but also doesn’t bode well for its long term potential. The film was also intended as a franchise starter, though any hopes of that have likely been dashed at this point. From here, a domestic total of around $30-35 million seems likely.

Alpha and Mission: Impossible Fallout were tied for fourth and fifth place this weekend, both of which are currently at an estimated $10.5 million. While that’s about what was expected for Fallout, it’s a few notches above tracking for Alpha. The prehistoric thriller has seen countless delays and release date changes, as well as a marketing push that hit its peak over a year ago. Considering all of that, many assumed Sony was attempting to bury the film for quality reasons, but it ended up receiving a strong 84% on Rotten Tomatoes. Even though that’s better than expected, it’s still not enough considering the $51 million production budget. Overseas results may soften the blow, but it’s hard to see how this doesn’t become a writeoff.

Among last weekends openers, BlacKkKlansman added a few hundred locations and was rewarded with a 36% dip, an impressive hold even with 278 more theaters showing the racial drama. These kinds of adult oriented pictures tend to play well in late August, especially ones with critical acclaim. From here, Focus Features’ hit should approach $40 million domestic when all is said and done. Slender Man was down 56%, which is honestly somewhat impressive considering the horror flick has received almost universally negative reception from both audiences and critics.