USA TODAY US Edition

‘Valerian’ navigates a tricky sci-fi minefield

- Patrick Ryan USA TODAY

Luc Besson is ready to play the summer’s biggest wild card.

The French filmmaker behind box-office hits The Fifth Element and Lucy is set to unveil his most ambitious science-fiction spectacle yet, Valerian and the City of a

Thousand Planets (in theaters Friday). Based on a French comic-book series, the 3-D adventure stars Dane DeHaan and Cara Delevingne as special operatives tasked with saving an intergalac­tic metropolis from an unknown force.

But with no big-name actors, a hefty $180 million budget and out-there source material that’s little known to U.S. audiences, Va

lerian risks becoming the latest sci-fi flop in a recent string of many.

Despite decent reviews from critics (72% positive on aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes), the movie is expected to open with just $18.5 million, easily bested by World War II drama Dunkirk’s predicted $55.5 million, according to BoxOffice.com.

If projection­s hold, it will come in below the first-weekend starts of bombs Tomorrowla­nd ($33 million against a $190 million budget), Disney’s futuristic theme park-inspired outing with George Clooney, and John Carter ($30 million against a $250 million budget), the critically panned adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ A Princess of Mars. Anything less than $20 million would put it on par with Jupiter Ascend

ing ($18.4 million on a $176 million budget), Lilly and Lana Wachowski’s space opera starring Channing Tatum and Mila Kunis.

With other sci-fi disappoint­ments including Alien: Covenant,

Life and Passengers this past year, why do studios keep ponying up big bucks for the genre?

“There’s a desire to discover a new franchise, the next Star Wars (or) Star Trek,” says Erik Davis, managing editor of movie ticket site Fandango.com. “They hope to stumble on a pot of gold. Sometimes we see that with something like The Matrix and sometimes we see the opposite with something like John Carter.” Besson, whose independen­t studio EuropaCorp produced Valerian, told Nerdist that he already has written a sequel. But Newsweek reports that the first entry will need to make at least $400 million globally to turn a profit, which could prove difficult as it competes against Spider-Man: Homecoming and War for

the Planet of the Apes, both of which also are targeted to younger male moviegoers.

“It’s awkwardly sandwiched in between those titles, so it’ll have a hard time finding that audience,” says Daniel Loria, managing edi- tor at BoxOffice.com. “Luc Besson is one of the (filmmaking) visionarie­s of this generation, but it will be difficult for him to stand out with this release date.”

But sci-fi has a tendency to surprise. Just look at the $2.8 billion worldwide take of James Cameron’s alien romance Avatar, whose long-gestating four sequels are slated for release starting in 2020. Then there’s the unexpected success of Marvel’s Guardians

of the Galaxy ($333 million) and its Vol. 2 ($386.7 million), whose unlikely superheroe­s (a tree and raccoon, among them), were “quirky enough that audiences fell into it,” Loria says.

Factor in lower-budget, higher-brow fare such as Arrival ($100.5 million), The Martian ($228.4 million) and Gravity ($274 million) — all of which were bestpictur­e Oscar nominees — and it’s become increasing­ly difficult to predict which movies will land with audiences.

“It’s hard to say what works and what doesn’t,” Loria says. “I don’t think there’s a general trend or formula of sci-fi that is or isn’t working.”

 ?? STX/EUROPACORP ?? Cara Delevingne takes charge as a special operative in Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, a sci-fi adventure based on a French comic-book series.
STX/EUROPACORP Cara Delevingne takes charge as a special operative in Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, a sci-fi adventure based on a French comic-book series.
 ?? WALT DISNEY PICTURES ?? Tomorrow
land, Disney’s 2015 movie about a futuristic theme park starring George Clooney and Britt Robertson, flopped.
WALT DISNEY PICTURES Tomorrow land, Disney’s 2015 movie about a futuristic theme park starring George Clooney and Britt Robertson, flopped.
 ?? WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Eddie Redmayne starred in 2015’s Jupiter Ascending, which earned $18.4 million against a $176 million budget.
WARNER BROS. PICTURES Eddie Redmayne starred in 2015’s Jupiter Ascending, which earned $18.4 million against a $176 million budget.

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