Better with age? Cruise's latest 'Impossible' tops box office
Updated 09:44, 02-Aug-2018
CGTN
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Improbable? Maybe, but "Mission Impossible – Fallout," the sixth and latest stunt-filled edition of the Tom Cruise action franchise has topped the weekend box office in North America, outperforming the five earlier "Impossibles."
The Paramount/Skydance production took in an estimated 61.5 million US dollars for the three-day weekend, according to industry tracker Exhibitor Relations, more than quadrupling the 15 million dollars earned by second-place "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again."
"Impossible" has 56-year-old Cruise, who famously still does his own cliff-hanging, car-rolling stunts, ordered to track down some missing plutonium and find a terror-minded villain. Critics seem to like the film despite its evident weaknesses: Though "often ridiculous," the Washington Post wrote, the film "works amazingly well."
A still from Tom Cruise's new film "Mission Impossible – Fallout" /VCG Photo

A still from Tom Cruise's new film "Mission Impossible – Fallout" /VCG Photo

Universal's "Mamma Mia" clung to the second spot for a second straight weekend, though its take was nearly 60 percent below its opening. With a star-studded cast including Meryl Streep, Amanda Seyfried, Colin Firth and Pierce Brosnan, the film uses plentiful flashbacks to fill in the story of Streep's carefree character on the only Greek island with a built-in ABBA soundtrack.
In third was Sony's "The Equalizer 2," with Denzel Washington again playing a former black-ops agent – and now low-profile Lyft driver – drawn into action to avenge a friend's death. It took in 14 million dollars.
Fourth spot went to another Sony film, "Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation," at 12.3 million dollars. The animated comedy, whose voice cast includes Adam Sandler and Selena Gomez, follows Count Dracula and his family as they get away from their hotel for their own vacation.
In fifth was a new release, Warner Bros.' family-friendly "Teen Titans Go! To the Movies," at 10.5 million dollars, which Variety called slightly disappointing given the film's 90 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes. 
Source(s): AFP