Toronto Star

Feel-good films thrive in turbulent times

Disney’s Moana among flicks finding box office success for offering escape from reality

- BRYAN ALEXANDER USA TODAY

There’s a warm feeling emanating from Hollywood. It’s called happiness. And it’s racking up wins at the box office.

Dwayne Johnson led Disney’s ebullient Moanato a resounding $81-million (U.S.) Thanksgivi­ng box-office win as the hilarious demigod Maui. Sick of Internet trolls? Hug-giving animated Trolls are holding strong in their fourth week ($135 million total). Keeping pace are fantastica­l escapes such as Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them ($156 million).

Meanwhile, cynical sequel Bad Santa 2 flopped with a $9-million opening. The angst-filled Edge of Seventeen, for all its great reviews, is flounderin­g, earning just $10 million.

Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for comScore, suspects audiences are seeking relief from a turbulent U.S. presidenti­al election and aftermath. The sometimes-struggling 2016 box office made $900 million between Nov. 4 and Nov. 27, up 8 per cent from the same period in 2015 ($832 million), according to comScore.

“It’s difficult to quantify, but there really is something going on here. People are coming to theatres, gravitatin­g to the fantastica­l and the happy side,” Dergarabed­ian says. “Movie theatres have always provided sanctuary during our hardest periods. The lights go down, you check out of real world troubles.”

Filmmakers are feeling it. Johnson recalls sneaking into pre-release screenings of Moana and watching the audience leave “floating,” he says. “And floating is good right now.”

“Everything in the news is so scary, so down. The Internet is judgmental and negative,” says Trolls director Mike Mitchell. “I’m happy that people want a film that feels like a party.”

This search for movie bliss will continue, says Jeff Bock, senior box-office analyst for Exhibitor Relations.

“People don’t want real life, they want true escapism, now more than ever. If you’re holding a comedy this winter, you have a big edge,” says Bock, who predicts films like Office Christmas Party (in theatres Dec. 9) and the animated singing-competitio­n comedy Sing (Dec. 21) will benefit. “Man, Sing is going to make money and have a shelf life.”

The happy feeling looks to carry over to awards season. Academy Award voters can have darker years (such as 2008, when No Country for Old Men won Best Picture) and lighter years (2012, when The Artist won five Oscars, including Best Picture), says Pete Hammond, awards columnist for the industry site Deadline.com. Hammond’s interactio­ns with academy voters show a “strong enthusiasm” for the uplifting side, which could negatively impact films like the “bleak” Manchester by the Sea. But it looks to help inspiratio­nal films such as La La Land, featuring Ryan Reynolds and Emma Stone singing and dancing (Dec. 9).

“People are shifting to the light side and La La Land will benefit, with its look at Hollywood in a lighter time. People are responding the same way they did with The Artist,” Hammond says.

“After a brutal election, voters want to be transporte­d away from doom and gloom.”

 ?? DISNEY ?? Dwayne Johnson stars as demigod Maui, right, in Moana. The Disney adventure film earned $81 million (U.S.) during the Thanksgivi­ng weekend.
DISNEY Dwayne Johnson stars as demigod Maui, right, in Moana. The Disney adventure film earned $81 million (U.S.) during the Thanksgivi­ng weekend.
 ?? JAAP BUITENDIJK/WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them raked in $156 million.
JAAP BUITENDIJK/WARNER BROS. PICTURES Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them raked in $156 million.

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