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Jennifer Lawrence portrays Katniss Everdeen in a scene from "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1." Image Credit: AP

Mockingjay, Part 1 didn’t catch fire like the previous installments of The Hunger Games, but it still had the biggest opening of the year with $123 million (Dh451.8 million) at the US weekend box office, according to studio estimates on November 23.

Lionsgate’s Mockingjay opened well below the $158 million debut of last year’s Hunger Games: Catching Fire and the $153 million opening of the 2012 original. But even with a $30-million-plus slide in the franchise, Mockingjay far surpassed the previous top weekend of the year: the $100 million debut of Transformers: Age of Extinction.

The result made for some unusual ironies. The biggest opening of the year (and by a wide margin) was seen by some as a disappointment. After initial box office receipts of Mockingjay rolled in on November 21 suggested a weekend take below expectations, Lions Gate Entertainment’s stock dipped 5 per cent.

But the decision to split the final book in Suzanne Collins’ dystopian trilogy into two films was clearly lucrative for Lionsgate. Mockingjay did even better overseas, where it made $152 million over the weekend, accounting altogether for a $275 million global opening.

“It’s the biggest opening of the year, so it really illustrates the strength of the franchise,” said David Spitz, head of distribution for Lionsgate, noting the North American opening was the 15th best ever.

Spitz declined to answer questions about Wall Street’s reaction to the opening, or what the effect may have been of splitting the third book in two. “It speaks for itself,” Spitz said of the result.

Splitting series

Dividing the book pushed much of the big drama of Mockingjay to the second film, scheduled for release in November 2015. On the same November weekend in 2010, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 — which similarly split the series’ last book into two — opened almost identically with $125 million. A year later, the second Deathly Hallows film debuted bigger than all previous Harry Potter films with $169 million.

“A little perspective is in order here,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box office tracker Rentrak. He called the Mockingjay results “still an astonishing feat”. “I’m not worried about this franchise,” Dergarabedian said.

The release calendar made way for Mockingjay, as no other new wide releases hit theatres. In its third week of release, the Disney animated adventure Big Hero 6 moved into second place with $20.1 million. Christopher Nolan’s space epic Interstellar came in third with $15.1 million, also in its third week.

Last week’s top film, the long-in-coming sequel Dumb and Dumber To, slid considerably. The Universal comedy dropped to fourth place with $13.8 million.