Stephen Lang in Don't Breathe.
Horror film Don't Breathe has pipped Bad Moms and Suicide Squad to come in at the top of the Australian box office.
Debuting on 153 screens, the Sony film rang up close to $1.3 million, with a screen average of $8,568.
Last week's champ, Bad Moms, dropped thirty-five percent in its fourth week to take a fraction less over the weekend off 283 screens. The Roadshow comedy has now made $12.5 million overall.
WB's Suicide Squad is on 275 screens and dropped forty-three percent in its fifth week to bring its cume to over $32 million, while Roadshow's Nerve, starring Dave Franco and Emma Roberts, debuted on 196 screens and racked up just shy of $1 million ($996,037).
Uni's Jason Bourne dropped a mere sixteen percent in week six, earning $759,322 off 190 screens to bring its pot to $20.6 million, while Sony's Sausage Party crossed the $8 million mark after four weeks in release.
Dropping forty-five percent in its second week was Para's Ben Hur, which took $529,054 to come in seventh and bring its tally to $1.8 million, while WB's War Dogs pulled in $495,520 in its third week to cross $3.5 million overall.
Oz-shot The Shallows has also racked up around $3.5 million in three weeks. Rounding out the top ten was Icon's Blood Father, the well-reviewed Mel Gibson comeback vehicle which debuted on 79 screens and averaged $3,404 to take $302,769 overall.
Madman's Hunt for the Wilderpeople is still on 64 screens after 15 weeks, and made more money last week than the previous one (jumping one percent), cracking $11 million with a weekend gross of $67,525.
The top Australian entry was Opera Australia's Turandot, which screened on 28 screens for takings of $23,537, followed by Rosemary Myers' acclaimed Girl Asleep, which Umbrella previewed on two screens for a weekend windfall of $11,967. The SA feature starring Bethany Whitmore has now taken $32,020 in previews alone.