HBO Max outperformed its streaming competition in the second quarter of 2021, as far as movie releases go.

Streaming guide and statistics company Reelgood found HBO Max and Warner Bros.' films Mortal Kombat and Godzilla vs. Kong had the biggest premieres among its 2 million users in the U.S. over that period, earning 8.9 and 8.1% of opening weekend shares of streaming and engagement. Netflix's Army of the Dead and The Woman in the Window were behind them at 6.7 and 4.8%, with HBO Max and Warner Bros.' The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It rounding out the top five at 4.7%. Pixar's Luca was the only Disney+ film to break the top ten, coming in at 4.5%

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All of Warner Bros.' 2021 films so far have simultaneously debuted in theaters while streaming on HBO Max for a period of 31 days, prior to returning to the streamer at a later date. By comparison, Army of the Dead was the only non-Warner Bros. movie to make Reelgood's top ten in the second quarter that also received a semi-wide theatrical release. Back in May, Zack Snyder's zombie action/horror thriller was projected to crack Netflix's top ten movie openings in its first four weeks.

While HBO Max and Netflix were the clear winners in the movie department, Disney+ pulled ahead of its competition when it came to series. In a separate report, Reelgood found Disney+'s Loki show opened with 10.5% of streaming and engagement shares in the second quarter, easily surpassing the debuts for Netflix's Sweet Tooth (4.2%) and Shadow and Bone (2.9%) during the same period. Loki was even bigger than Disney+'s other Marvel Cinematic Universe shows, coming out ahead of the premieres for WandaVision (9.3%) and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier (6%) earlier this year.

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With theaters reopening as the number of people vaccinated against the coronavirus (COVID-19) increases, streaming services continue to draw high viewership yet have seen a decease in the rate at which they add subscribers. Hoping to counter that and gain a leg-up over the competition, Disney CEO Bob Chapek recently announced the company plans to "mine" its Disney Park visitor data.

"We’ve got a tremendous amount of information on our consumers from our Parks business," said Chapek. "What would happen if we married that, and actually mined that data to help people subscribe to Disney+ knowing what we know?”

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Source: Reelgood