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Box Office: ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2’ Tops the Chart With an Okay Opening

Stephen Amell as Casey Jones and Megan Fox as April O’Neil in ‘Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows’ (Photo © 2015 Paramount Pictures)

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows was down 46% from 2014’s TMNT, however it still managed to snag the top spot on the box office chart, stealing it away from X-Men: Apocalypse. Opening with $35 million domestically, TMNT 2 is following in the footsteps of recent sequels that have had a hard time cashing in on their predecessor’s popularity including Neighbors 2 and Alice Through the Looking Glass. However, the sequel has earned better reviews from critics and audiences even awarded it an A- CinemaScore so it’s probable Paramount isn’t ready to call it quits on the franchise just yet.

The weekend’s two other big releases, Me Before You and Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping, finished in third and eighth place, respectively. Me Before You went after women and pulled off a surprising $18 million opening weekend which is better than anyone expected of the PG-13 rated romantic drama. The news wasn’t quite so sunny for Popstar which earned decent reviews but failed to find an audience, ringing up just $4.63 million over its first three days in release.

Box Office Top 10: June 3-5, 2016


  1. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows – $35,250,000
  2. X-Men: Apocalypse – $22,325,000
  3. Me Before You – $18,270,000
  4. Alice Through the Looking Glass – $10,691,000
  5. The Angry Birds Movie – $9,775,000
  6. Captain America: Civil War – $7,591,000
  7. Neighbors 2 – $4,700,000
  8. Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping – $4,630,000
  9. The Jungle Book – $4,247,000
  10. The Nice Guys – $3,520,000

This post was last modified on June 5, 2016 4:29 pm

Rebecca Murray: Journalist covering the entertainment industry for 23+ years, including 13 years as the first writer for About.com's Hollywood Movies site. Member of the Critics Choice Association (Film & TV Branches), Alliance of Women Film Journalists, and Past President of the San Diego Film Critics Society.
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