Disney’s second weekend of “Zootopia” is dominating U.S. moviegoing with about $47 million expected from 3,827 locations this weekend — double the launch of thriller “10 Cloverfield Lane,” early estimates showed Friday.

Sacha Baron Cohen’s comedy “The Brothers Grimsby” posted tepid returns with weekend estimates ranging from $3.6 million to $5 million at 2,235 sites. Sony’s “Grimsby” may be outdone by Lionsgate-Codeblack’s debut of romantic comedy “The Perfect Match,” bowing at only 925 screens.
Focus Features’ launch of faith-based “The Young Messiah” showed little life with a projection of $3 million at 1,761.
“Zootopia” continues to pack plenty of punch, heading for $11 million on Friday, down only 43% from its opening day. The animated toon should wind up the weekend with a 10-day domestic cume around $140 million.

On Friday, Disney trumpeted the fact that “Zootopia” has already passed $300 million in worldwide box office.
Paramount’s “10 Cloverfield Lane” was the only other significant draw on Friday with about $8 million at 3,391, projecting to a range of $23 million to $30 million for its weekend. That’s a solid performance for a project with a modest $15 million budget.

“10 Cloverfield Lane,” set in a bleak near-future Louisiana, launched with $1.8 million in Thursday night previews — the same number as 2014’s “Edge of Tomorrow,” which opened with a $28.8 million weekend. The film stars Mary Elizabeth Winstead, John Goodman and John Gallagher Jr., and was developed by J.J. Abrams’ Bad Robot Prods. as a spiritual successor to 2008’s found-footage horror film “Cloverfield.”
Critics have offered strong support to “10 Cloverfield Lane” with a 92% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Holdovers will take the third and fourth spots this weekend at about $10 million with a battle between Focus Features’ second weekend of “London Has Fallen” and Fox’s fifth frame of surprise hit “Deadpool,” which goes into the weekend with an impressive $317 million domestic total.
“The Brothers Grimsby,” starring Baron Cohen and Mark Strong, had been forecast to open with about $8 million but will finish well below that level. It’s by far the worst opening for a Baron Cohen comedy, compared with “Bruno” ($30 million), “Borat” ($26.4 million) and “The Dictator” ($17.4 million).

Baron Cohen and Strong play long-lost brothers who are reunited while Strong’s character is on a spy mission. The film is replete with edgy humor, including a scene in which presidential candidate Donald Trump contracts AIDS.
Paramount’s second weekend of Tina Fey’s comedy-drama “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot” may wind up in fifth place with about $4 million.

“The Young Messiah,” starring Adam Greaves-Neal as Jesus, has been marketed to the Christian community with a pre-Easter release. It’s going to fall short of recent estimates that had pegged an opening of about $7 million from 1,761 domestic locations.
The Lionsgate and Codeblack Films romantic comedy “The Perfect Match” could reel in as much as $5 million at 925 sites. Terrence J, Cassie Ventura, Donald Faison and Paula Patton star in the film.