There's no doubt that Universal and Steven Spielberg's Amblin are relieved that the dinos — who are fiercer and more varied than ever in the fifth installment of the franchise — fended off medicore reviews and won over males and families, in particular. Heading into the weekend, tracking suggested Jurassic World 2 would open to $130 million.

The sequel cost at least $170 million to make before marketing. Overseas — where Fallen Kingdom opened three weekends ago — the film took in another $106.7 million from 68 markets for a foreign total of $561.5 million and $711.5 million globally. That includes $202.6 million from China alone. Imax theaters turned in $19 million over the weekend, including $13 million domestically.

In North America, Jurassic World 2 came in 28 percent behind the first pic, which bowed to a then-record $208.8 million in June 2015. Jurassic World — benefiting from pent-up demand for a franchise that had long been absent from the big screen — scored the biggest domestic debut of all time when it was released, a record it held until Star Wars: Force Awakens launched to $248 million six months later.

The 2015 film marked Universal's best opening in history, not adjusted for inflation, while Jurassic World 2 is its second-best. The follow-up also scored the fourth-biggest opening of the year to date behind Avengers: Infinity War, Black Panther and Incredibles 2, which debuted to a record-shattering $182.7 million last weekend.

Incredibles 2 fell roughly 56 percent in its sophomore outing, one of the larger declines for a Pixar offering, although the bigger a film opens, the more it can fall. Also, Jurassic World 2 posed competition on the family front. Overseas, Incredibles 2 opened to $21.2 million in China, the top launch of all time for a Pixar title.

Elsewhere, a number of films achieved various milestones.

In its third weekend, Ocean's 8 crossed the $100 million domestically upon placing No. 3 with $11.7 million. The female-led spinoff stayed ahead of fellow Warner Bros. offering Tag, which took in $8.2 million for a 10-day total of $30.4 million. Offshore, Ocean's 8 grossed $26.9 million from 60 markets for a foreign total of $70.6 million and a global tally of $171 million.

Fox and Ryan Reynolds' Deadpool 2, which rounded out the top five domestically with $5 million-plus, cleared the $300 million mark in North America and $700 million worldwide. The superhero sequel finished Sunday with global receipts of $703 million, passing It to become the third-biggest R-rated film of all time at the global box office behind the first Deadpool and 2003's The Matrix Reloaded.

And, due to Incredibles 2 playing in drive-in theaters, Ava DuVernay's A Wrinkle in Time has topped the $100 million mark at the domestic box office, a first for a black female director. The two films are playing together at drive-ins, with revenues split between them. A Wrinkle in Time, which is otherwise done with its theatrical run, had earned around $98 million before Incredibles 2 debuted last weekend.

Among other holdovers, John Travolta's mob biopic Gotti is sinking fast. The indie film tumbled more than 54 percent in its second weekend to $812,000 from 466 theaters (the pic lost 37 cinemas). Gotti's cume is $3.3 million.

Like Gotti, Sony Pictures Classics' Boundaries, a feel-good dramedy starring Vera Farmiga and Christopher Plummer, also sparked headlines last week after Peter Fonda, who plays a supporting role in the specialty film, made a disparaging tweet about Barron Trump, son of President Donald Trump. Fonda later deleted the tweet and apologized, but that didn't stop first lady Melania Trump's office from notifying the Secret Service, while Donald Trump Jr. questioned why the studio wasn't taking action.

Sony Classics followed up with a statement saying Fonda's tweet was "abhorrent and reckless," but that it wouldn't alter the film, or pull its release, since that would penalize the rest of the cast and crew.

Boundaries didn't make much of a mark, earning $30,395 from five theaters for a lackluster screen average of $6,079.

Other new offerings at the specialty box office included Magnolia's Damsel, an indie Western starring Robert Pattinson and Mia Wasikowska. The film, which debuted in three theaters, likewise posted a muted screen average of $7,000.

Focus Features' Won't You Be My Neighbor?, a documentary about the late Fred Rogers, continued to make headlines. Moving into a total of 348 theaters, the film placed No. 10 with $1.9 million for a domestic total of $4.1 million.