The North American take has hit $365 million in its first 10 days as of Sunday with the studio projecting another $32 million on Christmas Day on Monday - making it the third highest domestic release in 2017 following "Beauty and the Beast" with $504 million and "Wonder Woman" at $412 million.
"Stars Wars: The Last Jedi" has totalled $380.3 million in international box office. It is already the top grossing film of 2017 in both Denmark and Sweden and the fourth highest grosser in the overall European market. The U.K. is the top market with $67.4 million, followed by Germany with $40 million, France with $29.3 million and Australia with $26.9 million.
Sony's "Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle" and Universal's "Pitch Perfect 3" have also opened solidly while Fox's "The Greatest Showman" is drawing respectably at the domestic box office. But moviegoers are showing little interest in Paramount's "Downsizing" and Warner Bros.-Alcon's "Father Figures."
"Star Wars: The Last Jedi" opened with the second-largest North American launch ever in its first weekend with $220 million. It faced competition for the first time on Dec. 20, with Sony's action comedy "Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle," which is leading the rest of the pack with $34 million at 3,765 sites for Friday-Sunday and a six-day total of around $64 million.
"Jumanji" also opened solidly with $49.5 million in 53 international markets, finishing ahead of "Star Wars: The Last Jedi" in 28 territories. Its top performance came in the UK with a second-place finish at $10.1 million including previews.
Universal's "Pitch Perfect 3" took in $20.5 million at 3,447 theaters and is on track for $27 million by the end of the four-day period. The threequel brought back the Bellas singing group with Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, Hailee Steinfeld, Brittany Snow, Anna Camp and Hana Mae Lee reprising their roles. "Pitch Perfect 3"also opened with $9.8 million in 14 international markets.
Hugh Jackman's "The Greatest Showman," a musical take on circus founder P.T. Barnum, grossed $8.6 million at 3,006 venues during Friday-Sunday. The movie, produced by Chernin Entertainment, opened on Dec 20 and is on track to take in about $18 million in its first six days.
"Downsizing" took in a quiet $4.6 million at 2,558 theatres in its Friday-Sunday debut and should finish four-day frame with $6.2 million. Paramount paid $65 million for the near-future comedy in which Matt Damon agrees to be shrunk to five inches in exchange for a better life. Audiences were unimpressed, giving the film a C CinemaScore.
"Father Figures" grossed a tepid $3.2 million at 3,902 theatres during Friday-Sunday and should add about $1 million on Monday. The film follows brothers - played by Owen Wilson and Ed Helms - who set out to find their biological father.
"The Post," directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Tom Hanks and Meryl Streep, dazzled with $495,000 at nine sites for Friday-Sunday. Fox will go wide with the journalism drama on Jan 12.