If you suspect that exhibition issues abound, this weekend saw three new adult-oriented releases, led by Clint Eastwood’s “Cry Macho,” all of which had weak or worse domestic debuts. “Shang-Chi” was a dominant #1 in its third weekend and broke a record, however obscure: At just under $22 million, it is the best-ever gross for the third weekend in September. That record is a nice side effect of being a trailblazer: Before “Shang-Chi,” it was all but unheard of for a film with that much potential to open early in the month. The Simu Liu actioner is also ahead of the third weekends for Marvel titles like “Spider-Man: Far from Home” and “Thor: Ragnorok,” although its current total of $177 million lags behind them at the same point.

“Dune” opened in 24 territories (starting either Wednesday or Thursday, in most) to an estimated $37 million, five weeks ahead of its domestic debut. Denis Villeneuve’s sci-fi epic performed as well or better than most recent hits in these countries. The film benefited from release right after its Venice premiere; it also benefits from better playing conditions, with many places lifting Covid restrictions. In the U.S., “Dune” will open with day-and-date on HBO Max; these dates offer no home access. Results for these films, particularly the Shang-Chi” hold give hope that a steadier supply of top new titles in October and beyond will improve overall results. Next month brings “No Time to Die” (United Artists) as well as “Venom: Let There Be Carnage” (Sony), “Dune,” and “The Last Duel” (Disney). Beyond the blockbusters, other stats are discouraging. With $48 million across all films, this weekend ranks as the lowest in three months, and reflects 40 percent of the same weekend in 2019. Our rolling four-week comparison to 2019 dipped to 66 percent. Everett Collection “Cry Macho” is #3, but managed only $4.5 million. (Like all Warners movies this year, it premiered day-and-date on HBO Max.) Surveys show its audience was 62 percent age 45 and older, and 66 percent white. Those demographics don’t propel ticket sales. Two just-premiered festival films, each from a top specialized distributor, failed to make much impact. “The Eyes of Tammy Faye” (Searchlight), with Jessica Chastain in pursuit of a Best Actress nomination, mustered $675,000 in 450 theaters ($1,500 per screen). The film has a 45-day window and will expand to around 1,000 screens this weekend. Justin Chon’s “Blue Bayou” (Focus), about a Korean-American man facing deportation, earned $315,000 on 477.

Pre-Covid, both of these films would have been platform releases with fewer theaters and higher per-screen averages. Even then, they would have faced the headwind of mediocre reviews (both ranked under the already-generous definition of “good” by Metacritic). Not that reviews are a panacea; Paul Schrader’s acclaimed “The Card Counter” (Focus) fell 58 percent in its second weekend, the most of any film in the top 15. The two best holds were both Disney titles: “Free Guy” (#2) dropped only 7 percent and “Jungle Cruise,” in its eighth week, fell 10 percent. All told, Disney-released titles made up 60 percent of the weekend. Also holding well was “Candyman” (Universal), off only 26 percent even as it began Premium VOD play this week. Also opening was “Copshop” (Open Road) from “A-Team” director Joe Carnahan. With Gerard Butler as an imperiled hitman, it managed a small $2.3 million in 3,003 theaters. The Top Ten

$365,000 in 1,073 theaters (no change); Cumulative: $1,374,000 The Alpinist (Roadside Attractions) Week 2 $136,940 in 245 theaters (+72); Cumulative: $557,546 The Lost Leonardo (Sony Pictures Classics) Week 6  217 $32,041 in 139 theaters (-78); Cumulative: $381,678   Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.