Captain America: Civil War scorched the weekend box office, bringing in the fifth largest opening weekend of all-time. The massive debut contributed to Disney bringing in over $200 million this weekend as the studio became the fastest to cross the $1 billion mark in domestic earnings in just 128 days, decimating the 165 day record set by Universal just last year. And while Disney was setting records, the weekend also saw a stellar comeback for Open Road's Mother's Day as it took advantage of its holiday namesake.

With an estimated $181.79 million opening weekend, Civil War not only scored the fifth largest opening of all-time, it is the third largest opening for a film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). In fact, compared to the other standalone franchises in the MCU, the Captain America franchise continues to show the greatest film-over-film growth as Civil War's opening is a 91.3% increase over the opening for Captain America: The Winter Soldier. Also note, Disney under-estimated the opening weekend for Avengers: Age of Ultron last year by $3.6 million and some rival studios suggest Civil War may have brought in as much as $186 million this weekend.

Of course, heading into the weekend, expectations were undoubtedly high as Civil War looked as if it may be able to become only the fourth film to top $200 million in its first three days. The film's reported, $250 million budget is on par with the budget for Avengers: Age of Ultron and, given the film's sheer size and scope, Civil War plays much more like an Avengers film than your typical Marvel, standalone character feature. Added to that, Civil War saw great reviews heading into the weekend (91% on RottenTomatoes), record Fandango pre-sales for a superhero film, more premium ticket options and 3-D theaters than Ultron and the premiere of two new superheroes. Yet, don't for a second think of the film's opening as a disappointment.

Civil War scored an "A" CinemaScore, and solid holds over its first three days in release suggest a stellar domestic run is in the offing. Should it play out on par with the likes of The Winter Soldier it will likely pass $300 million domestically by next Sunday (if not sooner) and could surpass $450 million overall depending on how it holds on once X-Men: Apocalypse hits theaters on May 20.

Globally the film's total is now up to $678 million after launching internationally last weekend and bringing in an estimated $220 million from overseas markets this weekend. In fact, with $496.6 million internationally after just two weeks, it has already surpassed the lifetime international cumes of Captain America ($194M), Iron Man ($267M), Thor ($268M), Iron Man 2 ($312M), Ant-Man ($339M), Thor: The Dark World ($438M), Guardians of the Galaxy ($440M) and Captain America: The Winter Soldier ($455M).

Contributing to Disney's record is the weekend's #2 film, The Jungle Book, which dropped 50% this weekend and added an estimated $21.8 million to its domestic total, which is now just shy of $285 million. Internationally, The Jungle Book added $24.1 million this weekend from 52 territories as its global cume climbs to over $776 million, placing it third on the 2016 worldwide charts.

In third we find the impressive result for Open Road's Mother's Day. The ensemble feature had something of a disappointing opening weekend last week but rebounded well by seeing a 7.6% increase this weekend, bringing in an estimated $9 million as its cume now totals just over $20 million.

Not performing so well in their second weekends, WB's Keanu dropped 67.4% with an estimated $3 million and Ratchet & Clank clunked its way to a $1.46 million weekend, a 70% drop.

From a per theater perspective, Captain America: Civil War was also on top. The film played in 4,226 theaters and brought in $43,017 per. Behind it was Fox Searchlight's limited release of A Bigger Splash, which brought in an estimated $110,000 from five theaters, $22,000 per.

Overall, with three films on the chart, Disney took in over $206 million this weekend, which totals more than 88% of the overall weekend. The weekend top twelve totaled almost $230 million, an 88.1% increase compared to last year.