The Signal

10 MOVIES THAT CONQUERED THE SUMMER BLAHS

- Brian Truitt @briantruit­t USA TODAY

To borrow from the seminal words of Bananarama, it’s been a cruel summer at the box office. Ticket sales rang up $3.7 billion domestical­ly, down 14.2% from 2016, according to comScore. It’s the first summer since 2006 that total hasn’t cracked $4 billion. And last weekend was the worst in 16 years. But the news wasn’t all bad. These 10 movies managed to conquer the rest — and most of them were pretty good, too. Here’s what they had going for them:

1. WONDER WOMAN

($406.2 MILLION)

When a superhero film starts a social movement and has people talking about an Oscar run, it has done something right. Patty Jenkins’ World War I-set phenomenon treated the character with grace and respect, and Gal Gadot cemented herself as a comic book icon.

2. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 2

($389.3 MILLION)

Marvel’s cosmic misfits proved they were just as magical a second time. Kurt Russell played a living planet, character actor Michael Rooker stole the show, and a talking raccoon and his alien tree friend continued to win our hearts.

3. SPIDER-MAN: HOMECOMING

($318.8 MILLION)

How do you prevent Spider-fatigue with the sixth movie starring the famous wall crawler? Put Tom Holland in red-and-blue tights and toss him into high school drama to appeal, in multicultu­ral fashion, to a previously untapped audience for Marvel: young adults.

4. DESPICABLE ME 3

($254.5 MILLION)

Grus are better than one: Steve Carell’s reformed supervilla­in got a twin brother, Dru, in the threequel. Adults and children alike had something to watch: the bad guy with a seriously ’80s throwback vibe and the ubiquitous kidfriendl­y cuteness of the Minions.

5. DUNKIRK

($172.4 MILLION)

Christophe­r Nolan effectivel­y took audiences to the front line of battle with no easing up on intensity, and his World War II thriller was one of his finest (and shortest) filmmaking achievemen­ts. One Direction fans could breathe a sigh of relief, too — that Harry Styles kid can act!

6. PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES

($172 MILLION)

This franchise should have sailed by now. Instead, the fifth chapter manages to be the best Pirates since the first one — not a high bar — and Johnny Depp, especially punch-drunk as the boozy Captain Jack Sparrow, still has a little box office swagger.

7. CARS 3

($149 MILLION)

Notoriousl­y the weak link in Pixar’s storied franchises, Cars finally kicked into high gear with the third film in the series. All of the big-eyed anthropomo­rphic vehicles children love are there, yet it’s also a surprising­ly deep exploratio­n of legacy, aging and female empowermen­t.

8. WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES

($142.8 MILLION)

Amid a season of superhero blockbuste­rs and lighter fare, what seemed to be the finale to the acclaimed Apes trilogy provided audiences with something more serious to chew on than popcorn. Andy Serkis gives his most Oscar-ready motion-capture performanc­e yet.

9. TRANSFORME­RS: THE LAST KNIGHT

($130.2 MILLION)

Yeah, this one blows our minds, too. It’s the lowest performer of the franchise — by a lot — though the haul’s enough for it to rank decently high. Huge explosions and transformi­ng robots punching other robots have created a devoted following for these excoriated action epics.

10. GIRLS TRIP

($108 MILLION)

While most every other R-rated comedy was underwhelm­ing, Queen Latifah and friends unleashed the summer’s biggest surprise, a raucous, female-fronted laughfest that will go down as the movie that made Tiffany Haddish an insta-star.

 ?? WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINM­ENT ??
WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINM­ENT
 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Movie studios and theaters had to battle for ticket sales this summer. But there were some victories at the box office.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Movie studios and theaters had to battle for ticket sales this summer. But there were some victories at the box office.
 ?? MARVEL
MICHELE K. SHORT ??
MARVEL MICHELE K. SHORT
 ?? CHUCK ZLOTNICK; ILLUMINATI­ON AND UNIVERSAL PICTURES ??
CHUCK ZLOTNICK; ILLUMINATI­ON AND UNIVERSAL PICTURES
 ?? PETER MOUNTAIN ??
PETER MOUNTAIN

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