This is one for the history books, everyone; Disney’s latest Star Wars spinoff Solo came in well below expectations domestically, and completely imploded overseas. Meanwhile, Deadpool 2 fell harder than expected, while Book Club and Infinity War continued holding well.

Solo was an interesting beast to try and predict leading up to Memorial Day weekend. Initially, expectations had it at around $130-$170 million for the four day frame, with official expectations from Disney on the lower end of that spectrum. However, once the official numbers came in, it just kept going down, and down, and down. This culminated in a terrible $83 million three day start, signifying a four day opening of $100 million, +/- $2 million or so. The comparison is far from flattering, but the similarities between this and Justice League are simply too apt to ignore. Following the release of a very hyped but generally polarizing title (Batman V Superman/The Last Jedi) the next installment simply failed to capture any meaningful attention, only appealing to hardcore fans and coming in well below expectations.

While Justice League flopped domestically, it wasn’t a complete disaster overseas. That’s where the biggest difference comes in for Solo. Generally I don’t focus too much on international results, but in this case it’s a far bigger story than the North American market; in its international opening, Solo took in an eye-gougingly terrible $65 million. For comparison, Deadpool 2 managed to nearly triple that without China. Speaking of China, Solo opened with under $10 million in that market, far lower than anyone could’ve predicted. This all culminated in a worldwide opening of just $148 million, which is firmly in the category of complete and utter disaster. A week ago, comparisons were being made to Justice League and Deadpool in terms of a ballpark for worldwide grosses; now they’re in line with Edge of Tomorrow and John Carter. The real problem is that due to a huge round of reshoots, the budget for Solo ballooned past $250 million. An exact number has yet to be announced, but Deadline is reporting that it could be over $300 million.

When taking simple raw dollars into account, there’s a legitimate chance that Solo loses more money than any title in history. If the budget is $300 million (or, God forbid, even higher) then the worldwide gross of $400 million or less would signify losses upwards of $200 million. This trainwreck will likely evaporate much of the profit from The Last Jedi, leading to major change-ups for the future of the franchise. While I won’t necessarily speculate on why this film imploded so hard, a general lack of interest following the eighth installment in the main franchise undoubtedly had an impact. At this point, the massive underperformances of the Star Wars franchise, the Dark Universe, and the DCEU leave Marvel as the sole extended cinematic franchise to be consistently successful.

Moving outside of first place, Deadpool 2 saw a sharper drop than expected, down 66% in round two. That drop is closer to Alien: Covenant than the original Deadpool, albeit not quite so drastic. Word of mouth was all generally positive, reviews were strong and competition turned out to not be as big an issue as expected, so it seems probable that Deadpool 2 was always going to be fairly front loaded, regardless of where it landed on the calendar.

Avengers: Infinity War dipped to third with $16.4 million, with a likely $20-$22 million by tomorrow. The film pushed past $620 million, and should ultimately wind up with around $660 million by the end of its run.

Book Club saw the best hold among nationwide releases, down just 30% for the three day weekend, meaning its four day weekend should be virtually identical to its opening. With $31 million in the bank so far, this should wind up with around $45-$50 million – or more – by the end of its run.

Among the specialty market, RBG added an additional 40 theaters, and as a result was down just 10%, good enough to remain in the top 10 for the weekend. First Reformed expanded into 29 theaters and saw a very strong $282K for the weekend. Both titles should continue to expand in the coming weeks, though it doesn’t seem particularly likely that either breaks into nationwide release (considered 600 theaters or more).