The summer season proper kicked off with the second weekend of Avengers: Infinity War, which delivered a crushing $112 million in its second weekend, becoming the fastest film to hit $1 billion in history. Meanwhile, Overboard saw a very solid second place debut, Tully was underwhelming, and Bad Samaritan imploded.

Infinity War dropped 56% in its second weekend, a fairly average hold for a Marvel title. While some were hoping for a drop closer to 50%, it’s hard to be too upset considering it’s just $9 million away from topping Age of Ultron after just ten days of release. Worldwide, the total has been lifted past $1.16 billion, topping the total gross of Captain America: Civil War.

In second place, Lionsgate proved that not every nationwide release needs be released in 2,500-3,000 theaters, as Overboard scored a very solid $14.75 million from just 1,623 locations, with a very strong per theater average of $9K. The closest comparison I had in this weekends forecast was Hot Pursuit, which opened a bit below this despite playing in nearly twice as many locations. Part of this success can be chalked up to Eugenio Derbez, whose titles such as How to Be a Latin Lover and Instructions not Included both heavily overperformed, despite playing in far fewer theaters than their competition.

In third, A Quiet Place saw another strong hold, down 31% for $7.6 million in its fifth outing. With $159 million in the bank, the Paramount thriller continues to push towards the $200 million mark, as it won’t see any major horror competition until Hereditary on June 8th.

Focus Features made the questionable choice to go direct into nationwide release with Tully, and their effort did not exactly pay off. The Jason Reitman dramedy took in $3.1 million from just over 1,350 locations, a start that doesn’t exactly inspire confidence for a long term run with plenty of nationwide releases on the horizon. Tully will almost certainly wind up below Young Adult‘s $16 million haul, which is a disappointing result considering the strong reviews and scope of the release.

Also opening nationwide was Dean Devlin’s Bad Samaritan, which flopped in tenth place with just $1.7 million from a whopping 2,007 locations. With very little marketing and a film that seemed more suited to a VOD release, it doesn’t quite make sense why this would get such a wide opening – until you realize that this was a passion project for Devlin, whose long career as a producer likely gave him enough industry cred to fund such an outing. Adding to this theory is the fact that his is the first (and presumably last) distribution job of Electric Entertainment, founded by Devlin himself. With a per theater average of just $876, this should vanish from theaters without a trace within two weeks.

Black Panther continued its Infinity War-boosted run towards the $700 million mark, as it dipped 33% with $3.1 million in its twelth weekend of release. With just $7 million left to go, don’t be surprised if Disney puts out some form of double feature in order to hit that mark within the next few weeks.

In the specialty market, Magnolia Pictures documentary RBG scored a solid $560K from 34 locations. Lean on Pete added 20 locations but still fell 50%, averaging a very weak $648.