On a fairly busy Easter weekend, Ready Player One pulled in a solid four day debut that landed above most expectations. Meanwhile, Acrimony landed a solid second place debut, Isle of Dogs impressed in its expansion, while God’s Not Dead: A Light in Darkness flopped.

Ready Player One pulled in an estimated $41 million over the three day weekend, and $53 million since its Thursday start. That’s not a phenomenal debut for a film that cost $175 million to produce, but it’s definitely good enough considering expectations had dipped so much in the weeks leading up to release. Add in strong overseas results, and the novel adaptation is already up to $181 million. With a solid A- Cinemascore, it should be able to hold up well in the coming weeks, possibly en route to a total of around $150 million.

In second, Tyler Perry’s revenge thriller Acrimony landed with a strong $17.1 million from 2,006 theaters. That gave it a very strong $8.5K per theater average, almost on par with Ready Player One. Perry’s dramatic outings tend to be fairly front loaded, but this should still wind up with over $40 million domestically, which is a fine result for Lionsgate.

In third, Black Panther was down 34% to $11 million, raising its domestic total to $650 million. Within the next few days, it will top the unadjusted gross of Jurassic World to move into the fourth place position on the all-time scoreboard domestically.

Boosted by the holiday weekend, I Can Only Imagine dipped just 21%, pulling off an incredibly impressive feat of having three weekends over $10 million, despite opening with just $17 million. The Christian drama has amassed a fantastic $55 million on a budget of just $7 million.

Despite a slightly-better-than-expected opening, Pacific Rim: Uprising plummeted 67% in round two. With just $168 million in two weeks and a domestic total that will likely fade out before $65 million, this is going to be a tough outing for Universal.

The last new release of the weekend was God’s Not Dead: A Light in Darkness. Expected to open with around $5 million, the PureFlix sequel took in a terrible $2.6 million. By comparison, the original God’s Not Dead made over $9 million in its opening despite playing in fewer than 800 theaters, while the sequel did around $7.6 million from more than triple that number. While it will likely make some money on home video, this will certainly be the last of the series to receive any sort of theatrical run.

Wes Anderson’s animated dramedy Isle of Dogs expanded into 165 theaters on Wednesday, and took in roughly $4 million in the five day weekend. That’s a very solid result, and bodes well for its continued expansion next weekend, followed by a nationwide release on April 13th.