John Krasinski’s smash sequel also was available on Paramount+. Did that have an impact? Only Paramount knows. Another point of interest: In its VOD debut, $19.99 meant a digital purchase of “Quiet” — not just a 48-hour rental. Electronic sell-throughs usually happen only after a rental-only option. Apart from its iTunes #1, “Wrath” otherwise scored three second placements on other charts, highlighting consistency between those ranking by sales and transactions. “Nobody” (Universal/$5.99) and “Godzilla vs. Kong” (Warner Bros./$5.99) also made all four charts, each as high as #3.

“Out of Death” (Vertical/$5.99) was the other standout new release. Bruce Willis stars as a corrupt rural sheriff in this home-platform release (it also grossed around $50,000 in 106 theaters over the weekend).  In a week when only 18 titles made the charts, the other debut is “Separation” (Open Road/$5.99), which landed at #10 on Vudu. The distributor waited close to the old-fashioned 90-day window before releasing the horror film on VOD. Continuing their breakout successes were Megan Fox in “Till Death” (Millenium/$6.99) on three lists and IFC’s “Werewolves Within” ($6.99) on two. “Mortal Kombat” (Warner Bros./$19.99, reduced by $5) and “Cruella” (Disney/$29.99) each showed up on three. Netflix Dominating Netflix in recent weeks is its “Fear Street” trilogy. “1994” led two weeks ago, “1978” last week, and “1666” upon its release July 16. All three remain in the top 10, but they have oddly familiar company with all five “Twilight” films (from 2008-2012, classics in Netflix context), with the original at #1. They’re available on the site for the first time. That leaves room for only two other titles. “Gunpowder Milkshake,” its German-made original female revenge thriller, was #1 during the week (now in second place). The other is “Cosmic Sin,” a futuristic Bruce Willis action film released on VOD earlier this year. For the first time in memory, no animated titles made the Netflix top 10. The “Twilight” placement shows the high value for library titles, as regularly services paying premium prices for older films. This is an extreme example, but the response shows both the retained interest in past hits as well as the premium value of first-rank franchises.

iTunes and Google Play rank films daily by number of transactions, irrespective of revenue accrued. These are the listings for Monday, July 19.

iTunes

Google Play

FandangoNOW

Vudu

Netflix Movies

Most viewed, current ranking as of Monday, July 19; originals include both Netflix-produced and Netflix-acquired titles.