opened to a stunning $67.3 million on Friday, which puts it on track to earn close to $150 million over the three-day weekend.That opening day ranks 10th all-time, and is on par withand. It's up 74 percent on, which was the previous best debut in the 14-year-old franchise. In a single day,has already earned more than the third installment in the franchise () grossed during its entire run.The big question now is how well the movie holds up on Saturday and Sunday. Reviews are good, and word-of-mouth is strong ("A" CinemaScore), though this is also part of a franchise that's notoriously front-loaded. The low-end forecast is around $135 million, which would be double the Friday number; on the high end, it would play likeand wind up with nearly $180 million.With the Easter holiday falling on Sunday, it's unlikely this has enough gas to pass $160 million. Still, a debut in the $150-million-plus range is very possible; that would placein the Top 10 openings ever.In a distant second place, DreamWorks Animation'sadded an estimated $11.3 million. With tons of kids off from school for Good Friday, the movie fell a light 28 percent week-over-week. To date,has earned $79.5 million.didn't fare quite so well, plummeting 61 percent to an estimated $5 million. Through eight days, the Will Ferrell Kevin Hart comedy has earned $49.1 million.Similar tobenefited from the school holiday: the movie eased 16 percent to $4.1 million, which brings its total to $161 million. By the end of the weekend, it will be the highest-grossing movie from 2015 (thoughwill take that title on Monday or Tuesday).rounded out the Top Five with $4 million (down 42 percent). It's earned $97.4 million so far, and will pass $100 million sometime today.Playing at 258 locations,earned an estimated $613,000 on Friday. For the weekend, it will likely wind up with around $1.5 million.