Major box office summer slump due to dearth of good blockbusters

Takings are down over 44% from this same time in 2015

Jacob Stolworthy
Tuesday 14 June 2016 08:51 BST
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This time last year, Jurassic World was released and went on to become the fourth highest grossing film of all time.

In the States, Colin Trevorrow's dinosaur sequel notched up a record-breaking $208.8 million (£147 million) in its opening weekend alone which is even more impressive when compared with this year's box office which is down more than 44%.

With this year's summer box office kickstarting early - and rather well - with Captain America: Civil War (released 1 May in the US), there's no doubt that the 2016 box office has since seen one hell of a slump.

Between the weeks of 6 May-12 June, The Hollywood Reporter points out how the North American box office saw a 22% decline marked by an accumulative revenue of $1.24 billion (£877 million) compared to 2015's $1.597 billion (£1.1 billion). Films that were expected to perform better include X-Men: Apocalypse, Alice Through the Looking Glass and Duncan Jones' Warcraft: The Beginning which generated a mere $24.4 million (£17 million).

comScore box office analyst Paul Dergarabedian said: "No matter how you slice or dice the calendar, there is no question that the summer of 2016 thus far has been a bit of a bummer, with the underperformers outnumbering the overperformers and a general malaise that has struck the early part of this most important moviegoing season."

He continued: "The poster child for this downturn has been the preponderance of sequels that have been unable to match their immediate predecessors in box-office dollars and critical and audience acclaim."

Of course, there are still numerous big films to come with Hollywood keeping the faith that they can salvage the lacklustre start; the coming months will see Independence Day: Resurgence, Finding Dory and Suicide Squad are all released.

So basically, the summer box office is relying on aliens, fish and depraved villains to do its bidding.

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