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Star Wars returned to theaters at the top of the box-office charts after a seven-year absence, but it didn’t quite hit lightspeed.

“Star Wars: The Mandalorian and Grogu,” based on a hit Disney+ streaming series, opened to $102 million domestically and $165 million globally through Memorial Day, according to Sunday estimates from Disney .

While hardly a flop, the movie will virtually match 2018’s “Solo: A Star Wars Story,” the least-successful film since Disney acquired George Lucas’s science-fiction franchise in 2012.

Expectations for “The Mandalorian” were more muted given its lower budget and roots on the small screen. Disney is also hoping the new film will ultimately make more than “Solo,” which finished its run with $392.9 million. “Mandalorian” got an average grade of A- from audiences, according to market research firm CinemaScore.

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Since 2019’s “Star Wars Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker” grossed significantly less than episodes seven and eight and disappointed many fans, the franchise has lived on streaming, where it helped fuel the growth of Disney+. “The Mandalorian,” in which Pedro Pascal plays a bounty hunter who works with a sidekick that fans nicknamed “Baby Yoda,” has been the most successful and a big hit in consumer-product sales.

Longtime Lucasfilm President Kathleen Kennedy was replaced by filmmaker Dave Filoni and business executive Lynwen Brennan in January. The Disney division that makes Star Wars is looking for films to once again drive the franchise as it pulls back on TV production. Next year, it will release “Star Wars: Starfighter,” starring Ryan Gosling, in theaters and a new trilogy of movies is in development.

The most surprising box-office news was that the horror movie “Obsession” grossed an estimated $22.4 million through Sunday, 30% more than last weekend. It is rare for a movie to earn more on its second weekend in nationwide release than its first. Positive word-of-mouth among young audiences is making “Obsession” a sleeper hit for Focus Features, the specialty division of Comcast ’s Universal Pictures.