I WAS HAPPY TO JOIN the Ankler’s Sean McNulty this week for his Monday Morning Quarterbacking of the weekend box office. Actually, I wasn’t happy: I was thrilled. Because this is an exceptionally exciting time at our nation’s movie theaters. It’s not just that the box office is tracking for its best year since the one-two punch of the pandemic’s theater closures and the strikes that shut down Hollywood. It’s that it has been years—maybe a decade or more—since it felt like we had such a diversity of films racking up huge numbers at the box office. There’s something for everyone, and it feels like everyone is showing up. Toy Story 5 is on track to be the biggest movie of the year (at least until Spider-Man: Brand New Day drops at the end of next month), and it’s always nice to have some family fare putting up numbers. (This is how you hook the next generation, after all: Get them addicted to popcorn.) But look at what else has topped the charts in recent weeks. Last week, we had an adult sci-fi drama from an old master top the charts in the form of Disclosure Day. The weekend before that, there was an R-rated comedy of the abrasive, raunchy sort that seems to have more or less disappeared from theaters come in at number one, Scary Movie. The weekend before that, Backrooms—a key text in the nouveau tube taking the nation’s youth by storm—debuted with the biggest numbers ever from mini-major A24. There’s a musical biopic, Michael, that’s about to cross a billion dollars worldwide; a big-budget sci-fi adventure, Project Hail Mary, that has wowed audiences; and a millennial nostalgia play, The Devil Wears Prada 2, that has outperformed virtually everyone’s expectations. And those are just the hits. Elsewhere on the charts, you have The Furious, a Hong Kong import that is the craziest martial arts movie since The Raid; a pair of queer indies in the horror film Leviticus and the coming-of-age drama Girls Like Girls; socialist agitprop in Boosters; a World War II Dad Movie about, of all things, weather, in Pressure; and an indie heist flick about a piano tuner turned safe cracker in Tuner. Behold the power of this fully armed and operational multiplex! One of David Poland’s major talking points, the thing he hits on time and again, is that we simply don’t have enough movies in release, that the number of wide releases remains down over the peak in years past. That’s still true; movie theaters could always use more movies. But for the first time in a long time it genuinely feels like there’s something for everyone, that nearly every audience niche is getting serviced by something. Review: SupergirlThe box office is at the highest it’s been on a year-to-date level since the pandemic despite one notable absence from the multiplex in recent months: comic book movies. Supergirl is the first in nearly a year. It’s not tracking well, and if audiences stay home, they won’t be missing out on much: It’s a stinker. And kind of a bummer! From my review:
Hollywood and AII talked to Ben Fritz of the Wall Street Journal about his exclusive on A24 partnering with Google to see what AI can do for the film studio. But we also ran through all the tech entanglements the studios have with the burgeoning AI boom, from Amazon’s decision not to distribute the forthcoming anti-AI drama Artificial to Disney’s weird dance with Sora and OpenAI. |