(Bloomberg) -- Walt Disney Co.'s is on pace to become the top-selling movie released in 2022 after leading the box office for a third straight weekend.
The sci-fi film generated $63.4 million in domestic ticket sales over the first three days of New Year's weekend, according to an estimate from Disney on Sunday. It has made $1.38 billion worldwide since its release on Dec. 16.
That puts Disney's film on track to surpass the $1.49 billion in sales for Paramount Global's , the current highest-grossing film released in 2022. Both studios have some bragging rights. The Tom Cruise fighter-jet movie made the most money at domestic theaters within the year, while tops it internationally.
The weekend performance demonstrates the unusual staying power of the Avatar franchise. didn't even have one of the top three domestic openings of 2022. Its 2009 predecessor also started out slowly, but ultimately sold a record $2.92 billion worth of tickets.
Visual effects, and the use of novel 3D-viewing technologies, have been a selling point for both movies. Avatar films incorporate the real-life movements of actors playing members of an indigenous Na'vi humanoid race into on-screen animation. The use of the tech helped make the movies some of the most expensive ever produced.
is probably on course to at least break even financially, an accomplishment given its high production costs. That bodes well for a series of sequels Disney has planned for the franchise through 2028. The Burbank, California, entertainment giant acquired the rights to the James Cameron films as part of a $71 billion acquisition of 20th Century Fox in 2019.

Despite several strong performances theaters still had a bad year, compared to pre-pandemic times. North American box office sales reached about $7.46 billion in 2022, far less than the $11.4 billion sales figure from 2019, Comscore estimated.
Part of the decline is because Covid-19 left movie-release schedules in such disarray they could take years to untangle. Audiences have also been conditioned to watch new films at home. The business may recover further in 2023 with installments of major franchises, including Indiana Jones and Transformers, planned.
--With assistance from .
(Updates with full-year box office receipts)
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