This weekend’s box office settled back into calmer territory after last week’s surge of new releases. Holdovers dominated the chart, with only one major newcomer entering the mix. Overall totals dipped again, suggesting that last weekend’s spike was more of a temporary boost than the start of a sustained theatrical rebound.

GOAT Takes the Crown in Week Two

GOAT claimed first place with $17.0 million in its second weekend.

After dramatically overperforming expectations during its debut, the film showed a solid hold. The drop is noticeable but healthy, especially considering the influx of competition in recent weeks. Strong word of mouth appears to be sustaining audience interest, allowing it to climb into the top spot as newer titles cooled.

Wuthering Heights Slides to Second

Wuthering Heights earned $14.2 million in its second weekend.

Last weekend’s champion fell to second place but still posted a respectable hold. The film continues to draw steady crowds despite opening below early tracking projections. Its performance suggests sustained interest rather than front loaded curiosity, which should help it remain a consistent presence in the weeks ahead.

I Can Only Imagine 2 Debuts Solidly

I Can Only Imagine 2 opened with $8.0 million.

The sequel arrived with a steady but unspectacular debut. Faith based releases often rely on consistent turnout rather than explosive openings, and this result fits that pattern perfectly. It may not dominate headlines, but its audience tends to show strong staying power.

Crime 101 Continues Its Run

Crime 101 added $5.8 million in its second weekend.

The thriller experienced a typical second weekend decline while remaining competitive. With several new titles crowding theaters recently, maintaining a top five position signals dependable audience interest even as momentum naturally slows.

Send Help Nears the End of Its Run

Send Help collected $4.5 million in its fourth weekend.

Now firmly in late run territory, the film continues to add incremental revenue as newer releases take over premium screens. Its steady presence across multiple weekends reflects solid audience curiosity even without blockbuster level staying power.

Scream 7 Predictions

Scream 7 is the big release next week. It’s tracking for $40 million to $53 million. Scream VI opened to $44 million so I would expect this to open to the same around $45 million. The marketing for this film has been subdued; so it’ll relay on word of mouth.

For more Movie news, stay tuned to That Hashtag Show.