'Captain America' Stays Atop Box Office, 'Heaven Is for Real' Surges

'Captain America' Stays Atop Box Office, 'Heaven Is for Real' Surges

(AFP) “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” stayed strong at the North American box office, muscling out the competition to retain top spot for the third week running, industry estimates showed Sunday.

The latest big-screen blockbuster starring Chris Evans as the iconic Marvel superhero took in $26.6 million over the weekend, figures from box office tracker Exhibitor Relations said.

All told, the film has earned more than $201 million in North America since its debut earlier in the month, when it had the biggest April opening of all time.

This weeks performance meant “Captain America” maintained its lead against another sequel, animated children’s movie “Rio 2,” a follow-up to the 2011 hit about a family of blue macaw parrots.

The movie, which features the voices of Jesse Eisenberg and Anne Hathaway in the lead roles, took in $22.5 million in its second weekend.

New release “Heaven is for Real,” starring Greg Kinnear as the father of a four-year-old boy who wakes up from emergency surgery with a story about going to heaven and back. It raked in $21.5 million for a close third place.

Another debut, “Transcendence,” starring Johnny Depp as a scientist who escapes death when his brain is uploaded into a huge computer, came in fourth place. It took in $11.2 million at the box office.

Kevin Costner’s latest big-screen appearance — sports drama “Draft Day” — moved into sixth place. 

The film, which sees Costner playing an American football team’s general manager on the day of the NFL draft, picked up $5.9 million.

“Divergent,” the dystopian tale of a young woman in a futuristic society, based on the popular young adult novel by the same name, reeled in $5.8 million for seventh place.

Sinking from third to eighth spot was horror film “Oculus,” about an antique mirror possessed with evil spirits. It garnered $5.2 million.

Rounding out the top ten, biblical epic “Noah,” starring Russell Crowe, earned $5.0 million for ninth place and the religiously themed “God’s Not Dead,” which tells the story of a college freshman who debates his atheist philosophy professor, dropped to tenth with $4.8 million.

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