'Girl on the Train' dominates while 'Birth of a Nation' is soft at weekend box office

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The Girl on the Train Barry Wetcher Universal final

Barry Wetcher/Universal

"The Girl on the Train."

Despite Hurricane Matthew causing multiple multiplexes to be closed in the southeast, the big screen adaptation of the best-selling book "The Girl on the Train" still easily won the weekend box office with an estimated $24.7 million, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

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The steamy thriller starring Emily Blunt did hit expectations by its studio Universal, but it didn't have the kind of opening similar to fellow best-seller "Gone Girl" did in 2014 with a $37.5 million opening. That movie though was received better by critics, as it has a 88% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, "The Girl on the Train" is at 44%.

The other big release of the weekend didn't do as well as some had hoped. "The Birth of a Nation," which started the year as the darling of the Sundance Film Festival as it took home its grand jury and audience awards but then limped into theaters after a 17-year-old rape charge of its director and star Nate Parker surfaced, took in an estimated $7.1 million.

birth of a nation

Fox Searchlight

"The Birth of a Nation."

That hit the projection that The Hollywood Reporter predicted, however, there were others that thought the film could get to $10 million, which is how much the film cost to make.

With a record-breaking $17.5 million by Fox Searchlight to nab the film at Sundance and likely an advertising budget between $10 million - $15 million to serve the movie's wide release, "Nation" has a lot of work to do for Searchlight to get in the black on the film.

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In better news, Disney continues to dominate the box office in 2016. It's Pixar release "Finding Dory" has passed the $1 billion worldwide mark, marking the fourth Disney title to hit the milestone in the last 12 months (the others are: "Captain America: Civil War," "The Jungle Book," "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," and "Zootopia"). Disney makes up for 25% of the domestic box office market share in 2016.

"Finding Dory" is currently the top domestic grossing film of the year with $484.5 million.

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