Disney’s “The Jungle Book” showed serious traction at the North American box office, dominating moviegoing for a second straight weekend with $60.8 million at 4,028 locations.

The family-friendly tentpole declined only 41% from its opening frame and left Universal’s launch of “The Huntsman: Winter’s War” in the dust with $20 million at 3,791 locations.

“The Jungle Book” posted the best second weekend of 2016, topping the $56.5 million second frame for “Deadpool,” and will wind up the weekend with $191.5 million after ten days — already the fourth-largest 2016 title behind “Deadpool” at $361 million, “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” at $319 million and “Zootopia” at $316.4 million.

Internationally, the results are equally impressive with an additional $96 million and a decline of only 32% from the prior weekend for an international total of $337 million and global cume to date of $528 million. “The Jungle Book” is the highest-grossing Hollywood release in India with $28.8 million and is less than $3 million short of the $100 million mark in China.

“The Huntsman: Winter’s War,” starring Chris Hemsworth, Jessica Chastain, Emily Blunt and Charlize Theron, debuted at the low end of forecasts in North America with $20.1 million amid mostly downbeat reviews and a B+ CinemaScore. The audience was 61% female and 53% under 30.

The prequel to 2012’s “Snow White and the Huntsman” carries a price tag of $115 million, so the studio will need a strong international performance to break even. “The Huntsman: Winter’s War” had already opened in 27 foreign territories last weekend and added 37 more for a weekend of $32.1 million in 64 territories for an international total of $80.2 million.

In China, “The Huntsman” opened in third place with $11.1 million at 5,932 sites behind the second week of “The Jungle Book” and a local film.

The first “Huntsman,” starring Kristen Stewart as Snow White, was a solid box office performer with a $56.2 million opening weekend in the U.S. on its way to a $155 million domestic total, plus another $241 million overseas. Nick Carpou, Universal’s president of domestic distribution, told Variety that the B+ CinemaScore indicates the film should perform well in coming weeks.

“We are very proud of this film and cast and we think it should have decent word of mouth,” he added.

Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst with ComScore, noted that the new “Huntsman” had been hit by tough reviews while the original benefited from Stewart’s participation while she was starring in the “Twilight” franchise.

He added that the sterling performance by “The Jungle Book” signals strong continued moviegoing in the upcoming weeks with Disney-Marvel’s “Captain America: Civil War” launching on May 6.

“You could not ask for a better lead in for the upcoming start of the summer movie season of 2016 than ‘The Jungle Book,'” Dergarabedian said. “Its incredible (and somewhat unexpected) success is stoking the fires of box office momentum and is loading up multiplexes with herds of film fans of all ages who are getting pumped up and ready for the official start on May 6 with the incredible ‘Captain America: Civil War’ and then the onslaught of blockbuster hopefuls from every studio week after week.”

“‘The Jungle Book’ proves that a four-quadrant PG-rated movie can have appeal to virtually every demographic and with the quality of moviemaking to back up the hype, the results have been staggering,” he added.

New Line-MGM’s second weekend of “Barbershop: The Next Cut” came in third with a 46% decline to $10.8 million at 2,676 locations for a domestic total of $36 million.

Disney’s eighth weekend of “Zootopia” finished fourth as it dropped only 19% to $6.6 million at 2,798 sites for a domestic total of $316.4 million. The animated hit also took in another $10.8 million overseas to pass the $900 million mark globally.

Universal’s third weekend of Melissa McCarthy’s “The Boss” came in fifth with $6.1 million for a domestic total of $49.3 million.

Roadside Attractions-Saban Films’ limited launch of Tom Hanks drama “Hologram for a King, took in a moderate $1.2 million at 401 sites. Bleecker Street saw less impressive results for Amazon’s “Elvis and Nixon” with $470,000 at 381 locations.

Liosngate’s action-comedy “Compadres,” starring Omar Chaparro and Joey Morgan, generated decent response with $1.4 million at 368 screens.

Sony Classics saw solid performance from its platform launch of Susan Sarandon’s comedy-drama “The Meddler” with $60,267.