
GOAT managed to unseat “Wuthering Heights” in the second weekend of their release, while none of the new releases had much impact.
GOAT made another $16.8 million, only down 38% from last weekend. That seems to confirm that this will be the go-to movie for families for a bit, and it doesn’t have any direct competition until Hoppers next weekend.  GOAT has a domestic total of $58.1 million and a worldwide gross of $102.1 million.
“Wuthering Heights” dropped 57% from last weekend, losing some of the boost it got from opening on Valentine’s Day. It made another $14 million domestically, bringing its total to $59.8 million and its worldwide total to $151.5 million.
I Can Only Imagine 2 performed the best of the weekend’s new releases, taking third place with $8 million. That’s the lowest opening for this “franchise” that includes I Can Only Imagine and I Still Believe.  For faith-based films, that opening is between Overcomer and The Nativity Story.
Crime 101 and Send Help rounded out the top 5, with Crime 101 dropping 61% from last weekend’s opening. It made another $5.5 million and has $24.4 million domestically and $45.8 million worldwide.  Send Help has a worldwide total of $83 million.
How to Make a Killing opened in sixth place with $3.5 million but was in 1,625 theaters, about half as many as some of last year’s misfires from A24 like The Smashing Machine. How to Make a Killing’s opening puts it between X and Eternity for A24 domestic openings.
EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert opened in 325 theaters and grossed $3.2 million, ranking seventh. This was a special presentation from Baz Luhrman who restored previously unseen footage of Elvis into a documentary/concert film.
Opening outside the top 10 was Psycho Killer, which garnered the rare 0% on Rotten Tomatoes. It made $1.6 million and opened in eleventh place.
The best per-theater average went to Billy Preston: That’s the Way God Planned It, a documentary about keyboardist Billy Preston, which grossed $15,903 at the one theater where it played.
