“Steve Jobs” was received with critical acclaim, but has since been nothing short of a box office bomb.

After spending just five weeks in theaters—two weeks for audiences nationwide—“Steve Jobs” was dropped from more than 2,000 movie theaters late last week. The film garnered box office receipts of $797,795 from 421 theaters, or $1,895 per theater, the previous weekend, according to studio numbers reported by Rentrak.

By comparison, “The Martian,” pulled in $3,178 per theater in the same weekend.

“Steve Jobs” has grossed just $16.7 million domestically, on a production budget of $30 million, according to numbers provided by Box Office Mojo—whereas Apple Inc. AAPL, -4.19% takes in that much in revenue roughly every 38 minutes.

Based on Apple’s revenue of $234 billion for fiscal 2015, MarketWatch has extrapolated the following:

“It’s a shame the movie flopped like this,” said Box Office analyst Phil Contrino. “People must just be tired of his story, because they just didn’t show up for it. And now it’s well on its way out.”

Like a lot of industry experts, Contrino had high hopes for the film. After performing well in a limited New York City and Los Angeles release, and with good reviews, Contrino expected “Steve Jobs” would garner $21 million for Comcast Corp.’s CMCSA, -1.79% Universal Pictures, in its nationwide debut; instead, it pulled in $7.2 million.

While most films stay in theaters an average of 8-10 weeks, “Steve Jobs” is heading for the exit just five weeks in, and Contrino said a commercial performance such as this could even hinder its award possibilities.

“Commercial success is a validation, it keeps the film in the conversation, so this not doing well definitely hurts,” Contrino said. “I would still be surprised if Michael Fassbender isn’t nominated for Best Actor, but he’s not the leading contender any more. If an Oscar contender like this doesn’t take off during this time, you can relate it to a big action blockbuster not taking off during the summer, it just gets swallowed up because there’s so much more out there.”

Here are some other films that haven’t performed well this year: