In an unsurprising turn of events, Sony’s Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle easily repeated in first place, while Fox’s nationwide expansion of The Post scored a solid if unspectacular second place debut. The trio of other new releases, however, failed to impress.

Jumanji topped Despicable Me 3 this weekend, becoming the 8th highest grossing film of 2017. The three day total was a strong $27M, with the four day holiday expected somewhere in the low $30M range. With this kind of consistent staying power, it’s almost a done deal that the comedy sequel will end up in the top 5 by the end of its run. With a budget of just $90M and a worldwide gross approaching $600M, every penny this is making from here on out is just pure money in the bank.

Fox once again proved that their strong suit is mid-budget adult dramas, as The Post landed in second place with $18M over the three day weekend, with the holiday expected to raise that number to around $22M. The journalism drama had already taken in around $4.5M from limited release starting on Christmas, which means its total by tomorrow should be around $27M. With a strong A Cinemascore and plenty of Oscar buzz, this one could potentially top the century mark, though a total in the mid $90M range seems more likely.

In third was Lionsgate’s The Commuter, which pulled in a mediocre $13.4M, not a wonderful start to the new partnership between Studio Canal and the aforementioned Lionsgate. The two will continue their partnership through the next several years, and also meant that Lionsgate was only on the hook for prints and advertising. If it doesn’t completely fall off this coming weekend, it could look for a total of around $35M, less than either of the Taken sequels made in their opening weekend.

Insidious hold surprisingly well in its second weekend, down 59% to $12.1M. That sounds like a lot, but considering Insidious 2 and 3 both fell over 65% in their second weekends, this is a minor win. The horror sequel cost just $10M to produce and will likely end up with around $65M total. The only horror competition it has to worry about is Winchester on February 2nd.

Two Christmas releases, The Greatest Showman and Pitch Perfect 3 both held very well, and have totals up to roughly $94.5M each, and should top the century mark by next weekend. The Last Jedi, on the other hand, continued to suffer harsh drops, down an additional 52.5% to $11M. For comparison, Rogue One was down just 39% over the three day weekend, while The Force Awakens dipped 38%.

Warner Brothers’ Paddington 2 floundered a bit in its release, taking in just $10M. That’s significantly lower than its predecessor, and is not good considering Warner spent $30M to acquire the film from The Weinstein Company, who were unable to release the film following last years controversy. They apparently spent around $30M on distribution rights, although the film racked up $125M from overseas, so there probably won’t be too great a loss here.

Sony’s action thriller Proud Mary floundered with just $10M for the three day weekend, below even my predictions going into the weekend (which were significantly lower than most other tracking). Reviews were poor, the release was quite small at 2,200 theaters, and the complete lack of marketing from Sony was a sign that they were just trying to bury this and cut their losses. Best case scenario from here is that it winds up with around $25M domestically.

In limited release, I, Tonya took in a solid $3.3M from 517 theaters. Neon will likely be expanding into nationwide release next weekend. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri expanded back into 1,022 theaters following a number of Golden Globe wins, and took in a decent $2.3M. The drama will be nearing $30M by the end of the holiday weekend, a number it should top before the Oscars on March 4th.

Phantom Thread expanded into 62 theaters and continued to see excellent numbers, with an $18K per theater average, leading to a weekend of $1.1M. What remains to be seen is whether or not a 140 minute drama about clothing can appeal to mainstream audiences.

Next weekend will see the nationwide releases of Warner Brothers’ 12 Strong, STX’s Den of Thieves, Forever My Girl, as well as the wide expansions of Hostiles and Phantom Thread.