‘Ice Age’ wins the weekend

Fox's
Fox's "Ice Age: Continental Drift" beat rival animated flick "Brave" at the box office this weekend.
  • Fox's "Ice Age: Continental Drift" is the fourth film in the "Ice Age" franchise
  • "The Amazing Spider-Man" came in second at the box office during the weekend
  • "Ted," with Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis, took third

(EW.com) -- Spider-Man has been knocked off ... and not by The Lizard.

Fox's "Ice Age: Continental Drift," the fourth film in the animated franchise, won the weekend with an estimated $46 million opening at the box office.

The family-friendly flick bowed in 3,881 theaters and earned an $11,853 per-theater average over the Friday-to-Sunday period. The film has already made roughly seven times that much in foreign territories.

Compared to the previous installments in the "Ice Age" series, "Continental Drift" fell smack dab between the second and third film's openings. And thanks to an bullish "A-" grade from CinemaScore, "Continental Drift" should get some strong word of mouth and hold up well with younger audiences and their parents.

In second place, Peter Parker & Co. spun $35 million over the weekend, a drop of 43.6 percent.

If weekend estimates hold, the Sony tentpole will cross the $200 million mark, landing at $200.9 million. Psychologically at least, that's an important threshold for "The Amazing Spider-Man" -- especially with Bruce Wayne on deck at the multiplex.

Taking the bronze for the weekend was "Ted" — Universal's Mark Wahlberg/Mila Kunis/talking bear comedy.

The film scored a strong third week haul of $22.1 million, dropping just 31.2 percent — thanks in part to the fact that it added 47 playdates. Its total domestic take is now $158.9 million.

In fourth, "Ice Age's" main 'toon challenger, "Brave," stayed strong adding $10.6 million more to its quiver. Its four-week total is now $195.5 million, which means it should cross the $200 million mark by next weekend.

Rounding out the top five is Warner Bros.' stripper comedy "Magic Mike." The Channing Tatum flick bumped and grinded for $9 million in its third frame, edging out Oliver Stone's "Savages," and bringing its total to $91.8 million.

One notable performance bubbling under the top 10 was this summer's indie critical darling, Fox Searchlight's "Beasts of the Southern Wild," which jumped from No. 21 to No. 16 after quadrupling the number of the theaters it was in. The film earned $775,000 on 81 screens for a terrific $9,568 per-screen average — second only to "Ice Age" in the top 20.

See the full article at EW.com.

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