The month of June got off to a predictably slow start, as Solo failed to save face after its disappointing opening. Meanwhile, Adrift opened on target with somewhat middling results, Upgrade opened above expectations, while Action Point had one of the worst openings ever for a film playing in over 2,000 theaters.

Solo was down 65% in its second weekend. That’s almost an identical hold to Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales from last year. If it continues to follow that films pattern, it will wind up with around $230 million. The difference is that Pirates had its toughest competition in round two with Wonder Woman, whereas Solo had the same drop with almost no titles to fight against. With Ocean’s 8, Hereditary, and Incredibles 2 on the horizon, it likely will wind up short of that number. Overseas, where the film has only cracked $115 million, it’s just days away from being decimated by Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, meaning a total worldwide gross of under $400 million is essentially guaranteed.

In second, Deadpool 2 dropped 46% for a $23 million third performance. This was the original weekend in which the title was going to open, and Fox is likely kicking themselves for not holding onto that date. Still, Fox’s raunchy superhero comedy has made over $250 million domestically to date, and is just shy of the $600 million mark worldwide.

Adrift opened on target with predictions, at $11 million from a massive 3,015 locations. As with other STX releases, the distributor was only in charge of a certain P&A spend, rather than the drama’s $35 million production cost. Still, considering their $3 million acqusition and $25 million spend, it’s unlikely this turns a profit in theaters.

Avengers: Infinity War dipped 40% and raised its domestic total to $642 million. As it inches closer towards the $2 billion mark, the real question is how close the gap is going to be domestically between it and Black Panther, which is now just $900,000 away from $700 million, becoming the 30th film of all time to do so when adjusting for inflation.

In sixth, BH Tilt enjoyed a better-than-expected $4.4 million for its microbudget thriller Upgrade. This is the second best opening to date for the Tilt brand, which focuses on lower budget, less marketable titles that may otherwise only see VOD releases. Tilt has its next nationwide release scheduled right in the middle of July in the form of Unfriended: Dark Web, which, similarly to Upgrade, made a splash at its SXSW premiere. The only downside is that it’s going to face tough competition next week from both Hotel Artemis and Hereditary.

All the way down in ninth was Paramount’s Jackass-style comedy Action Point, which imploded with a stunning $2.3 million from 2,032 locations. That’s about half of even the most pessimistic predictions, and is also half of fellow first-weekend-of-June-comedy-flop Popstar from 2016. After two hits with A Quiet Place and Book Club, Paramount seemed due for another dud, and they certainly found it. The $19 million production will likely vanish entirely from theaters by its third weekend, which will see the releases of both Incredibles 2 and fellow R rated comedy Tag.

Heading into the specialty market, RBG became Magnolia’s highest grossing release to date, as the sleeper hit has quietly racked up nearly $8 million to date. The first co-release for Moviepass Ventures, American Animals, opened in 4 locations with a strong $140K. The crime thriller is set to expand into a few hundred locations throughout the month of June. A24’s drama First Reformed expanded into 91 locations with a strong $455K. The indie studio just suddenly moved the release of Under the Silver Lake back to December, likely to focus their marketing efforts on Hereditary, which seems shaping up to be a sleeper hit when it hits theaters this coming weekend.