In a win for Gerard Butler and Lionsgate, the heist pic Den of Thieves 2: Pantera topped the domestic box office with a better-than-expected $15.5 million opening over the second full weekend of 2025.
The male-fueled film, produced by Tucker Tooley, marks the first time in months that a Lionsgate title has come in No. 1. In further good news, the sequel performed on par with the first Den of Thieves, released by STX in 2018.
So far, moviegoing doesn’t appear to be dramatically impacted in the greater Los Angeles area despite the historic fires raging across the region (L.A. is the top market in the country), according to studio distribution sources monitoring the situation. They say they’ll have a more complete picture later on Sunday or Monday morning. And while there was a slowdown in some spots — including at AMC Universal Citywalk and AMC Americana Glendale — L.A. cinemas continued to lead the list of the weekend’s top-grossing theaters, or at least through Saturday. In terms of closures, only four smaller theaters were closed as of Friday; most were in the Altadena-Pasadena area.
In terms of individual movies, the big casualty of the weekend was the Robbie Williams’ biopic Better Man. The British film, distributed by Paramount, earned just $1.1 million as it expanded from six to 1,291 locations after opening in a handful of cinemas on Christmas Day. The pricey independently financed movie — it cost north of $100 million to produce — has received strong reviews and audience exit scores, yet isn’t resonating on a larger scale after opting to feature the British pop star as a computer-generated monkey.
At the other end of the spectrum, top Golden Globes winner The Brutalist prospered as it expanded into 68 locations, grossing $1.4 million for an eye-popping per-theater average of $20,408. The movie came in 11th place, just behind Roadside Attractions’ awards contender The Last Showgirl, which earned $1.5 million as it officially opened in 870 locations after staging an awards qualifying run in December. The film, directed by Gia Coppola, stars Pamela Anderson.
Back at the top of the chart, Disney’s Mufasa: The Lion King stayed in second place with $13.2 million as the movie crossed the $540 million mark globally. The studio also claimed fifth place with Moana 2, which earned another $6.5 million domestically as it prepares to join the billion-dollar club globally. The animated blockbuster finished Sunday with an estimated $989.8 million in worldwide ticket sales.
Paramount’s Sonic the Hedgehog 3 also celebrated a major milestone as it dashed past the $200 million mark domestically and $394 million globally (its foreign tally is $180.3 million). The film placed third in North America with $11 million, followed by $6.8 million for Focus Features’ edgy vampire pic Nosferatu, which now sports a domestic total of $81.8 million and $53.9 million internationally for a global cume of $135.8 million.
Searchlight’s awards front-runner, A Complete Unknown, landed in sixth place with $5 million, as it jumped the $50 million mark domestically after landing top SAG nominations this past week.
The Bob Dylan biopic, starring Timothée Chalamet, received four noms, the second-most of any movie behind film behind Universal’s blockbuster musical Wicked, which finished Sunday with nearly $700 million in global ticket sales.
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