Overcoming an early spate of bad reviews, The Mummy Returns started the summer movie season off with a bang last weekend by bringing in $70.1 million, the largest non-holiday opening in box office history. Facing weak pre-summer competition, The Mummy Returns grabbed over seven out of every ten dollars spent on movies during a weekend that was up 32% from last year (when Gladiator ruled the screens). So complete was The Mummy Returns' domination that the second place film only garnered $6.1 million in admissions. The Mummy Returns had a superb $20,612 per screen average on a massive number of screens (see 'The Mummy Returns -- to 3,397 Screens'), topped only in the annals of widely released films by the Phantom Menace and Jurassic Park II: The Lost World, both of which averaged just under $22,000 per screen. The summer movie season used to start on the Memorial Day weekend at the end of May, but the success of Gladiator (which opened May 5, 2000) and now The Mummy Returns means that the first weekend in May is now a prime opening slot. Next year Spider-Man is slated to jumpstart the summer movie season with a May 3, 2002 opening.
The Mummy Returns' triumphant showing at the box office came in spite of a very mixed reaction from the critics, though the film did gain some positive critical attention from key publications including Variety, USA Today, and the Los Angeles Times, among others. The strong performance of The Mummy Returns demonstrates that the mass audience is clearly ready to enjoy an action-packed summer blockbuster, and the addition of WWF superstar The Rock, who plays the Scorpion King, certainly didn't hurt the film either.