USA TODAY US Edition

‘Secret’ is out: ‘Pets’ is a runaway hit

Animated romp knocks off ‘Dory’ with $103 million

- Brian Truitt @briantruit­t USA TODAY

After ruling the box office for three weeks, the fabulous fish of

Finding Dory were deep-sixed by another pack of talking animals. Animated comedy The Secret

Life of Pets chomped at the heels of its competitio­n with an enormous $103.2 million debut, according to studio estimates from comScore.

Featuring the voices of Louis C.K. and Eric Stonestree­t as a pair of domesticat­ed dogs unleashed in the big city, the movie played mostly well for critics (76% ap- proval on review aggregate site RottenToma­toes.com) and definitive­ly so for moviegoers (an A- at CinemaScor­e).

Pets secured the largest opening ever for an original film that wasn’t based on previous source material (such as a book or comic), surpassing Inside Out’s $90.4 million last year.

“If any pets were wondering what their owners were doing this weekend, they were seeing this movie,” says comScore senior media analyst Paul Dergarabed­ian, who adds that Secret Life “overperfor­med massively,” thanks to a great title and an irresistib­le concept. “This proves if you have a truly original idea — not a sequel, not a franchise, not something already known — that you can still create a massive hit.”

The Legend of Tarzan came in second with $20.6 million, edging out Finding Dory, which earned $20.4 million. More impressive­ly, though, the Finding Nemo sequel surpassed Captain America: Civil

War as the biggest movie of the year in just 24 days. With a $422.6

million domestic haul, Finding Dory looks poised to become the highest-grossing animated movie of all time as it approaches the North American record held by Shrek 2’ s $436.7 million. Fourth place went to the raunchy new comedy Mike and Dave

Need Wedding Dates with $16.6 million. Reviews (41% positive on Rotten Tomatoes) were mixed for the Zac Efron and Adam Devine vehicle, and a B on CinemaScor­e means audiences weren’t totally approving, either.

Rounding out the top five was the horror sequel The Purge: Elec

tion Year with $11.7 million. Art-house offering Captain

Fantastic lived up to the name: The family drama starring Viggo Mortensen made $98,500 in its initial limited-run opening — averaging $24,600 per screen.

Final figures are out Monday.

 ?? ILLUMINATI­ON ENTERTAINM­ENT/UNIVERSAL PICTURES ??
ILLUMINATI­ON ENTERTAINM­ENT/UNIVERSAL PICTURES

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