‘Suicide Squad’ kills competition at US box office

In this image released by Warner Bros. Entertainment, cast members, clockwise from left, Margot Robbie, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Joel Kinnaman, Will Smith, Jai Courtney and Karen Fukuhara appear in the film, "Suicide Squad." This week's Comic-Con is expected to draw more than 160,000 fans for high-energy sessions featuring casts and crews from such films and TV shows as "Game of Thrones," "Star Trek," "Suicide Squad," "South Park," "Teen Wolf," "Aliens" and "The Walking Dead."(Clay Enos/Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP)

In this image released by Warner Bros. Entertainment, cast members, clockwise from left, Margot Robbie, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Joel Kinnaman, Will Smith, Jai Courtney and Karen Fukuhara appear in the film, “Suicide Squad.” This week’s Comic-Con is expected to draw more than 160,000 fans for high-energy sessions featuring casts and crews from such films and TV shows as “Game of Thrones,” “Star Trek,” “Suicide Squad,” “South Park,” “Teen Wolf,” “Aliens” and “The Walking Dead.”(Clay Enos/Warner Bros. Entertainment via AP)

LOS ANGELES—Defying critics as well as competition from two new releases, the DC Comics-inspired “Suicide Squad” topped the US box office for a second weekend, industry tracker Exhibitor Relations said Monday.

The action film, in which Will Smith, Jared Leto and Margot Robbie play a band of deadly criminals hired to carry out risky secret missions, chalked up $43.5 million in sales on North American screens.

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That was down sharply from its opening take of $133.7 million, but still enough to edge out new releases “Sausage Party” and “Pete’s Dragon.”

“Sausage Party,” an animated adult comedy from Sony, with Seth Rogen voicing the lead meat product, is what Variety called “a madcap crazy salad of industrial-strength raunch.” It netted $34.3 million.

“Pete’s Dragon” tells the tale of an orphan boy and the (computer-animated) dragon who befriends him. Disney’s remake of the original 1977 film, this time with Robert Redford as one of the townspeople who believes in the elusive dragon, took in $21.5 million.

“Jason Bourne,” starring Matt Damon in the latest chapter of Universal’s enduring spy thriller, came in fourth, with $13.8 million.

And “Bad Moms,” the bawdy comedy starring Mila Kunis, Kristen Bell and Kathryn Hahn as overworked and under-appreciated mothers who toss responsibility out the window, placed fifth, at $11.4 million.

Rounding out the top 10 films of the weekend were:

— “The Secret Life of Pets” ($9 million)

— “Star Trek: Beyond” ($6.9 million)

— “Florence Foster Jenkins” ($6.6 million)

— “Nine Lives” ($3.5 million)

— “Lights Out” ($3.2 million)

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