KEY POINTS
  • "It: Chapter 2" hauled in $91 million domestically over the last three days, the second-highest horror movie opening of all time.
  • Analysts had estimated the flick would bring in more than $100 million, while Warner Bros. had forecast $85 million in ticket sales for the weekend.
  • Hurricane Dorian, a lower Rotten Tomato score and a lengthy run time could have contributed to the weaker-than-expected gross.
Still from Warner Bros.' "It: Chapter 2."

"It: Chapter Two" wasn't able to scare up more ticket sales than the first installment of Warner Bros. two-part adaptation of Stephen King's famed novel, but it did manage to have the second-highest horror movie opening of all time.

The film, which takes place 27 years after the first film, hauled in $91 million domestically over the last three days, shy of analyst estimates which called for the flick to bring in more than $100 million. Still, it was able to breeze past 2018's "Halloween's" $76.2 million opening, which was the second-highest opening for a horror film.