By Chris Kavan - 08/10/17 at 06:37 AM CT
As summer continues to wind down, we head into one of the more lazy movie seasons of the year. Summer is already down and the coming weeks aren't likely to change the course. The Dark Tower already opened to low numbers and this week's best bet is an animated sequel to a squirrel proposition and a horror sequel about a cursed doll. For the more discerning movie fan, there is downright depressing coming-of-age drama. It looks like once again it's going to be a pretty slow weekend - we'll have to see if it turns out better or worse than last weekend, which was already the lowest-grossing of the summer movie season.
THE NUT JOB 2: NUTTY BY NATURE The first Nut Job was a minor hit - making $64 million on a $42 million budget ($120.88 million worldwide). While that is a decent return, I'm still kind of surprised they decided to go with a sequel. In any case, Will Arnett returns to voice our lead Surly squirrel, and this time the entire park is in danger when the corrupt mayor (Bobby Moynihan) plans to tear down everything in order to make room for a shoddy amusement park. Surly isn't alone, he has a lot of help - and the voice talent is there too - Jackie Chan (as a wise, wise-cracking mouse with a kung-fu army of mice), Bobby Cannavale, Katherine Heigl, Maya Rudolph, Isabela Moner, Peter Stormare, Gabriel Iglesias and Jeff Dunham are all on hand. Still, the first film opened with a little over $19 million and the law of diminishing returns means Nut Job 2 isn't likely to top that mark. It may be the last summer family movie, but with school starting, it may have missed its mark. If it makes the mid-teens, it will be pretty good result.
THE GLASS CASTLE On the lower end of the scale, though it's based on a best-selling memoir and stars the likes of Brie Larson, Woody Harrelson, Naomi Watts and Ella Anderson - The Glass Castle isn't looking to make much noise. The adult-targeting drama follows Jeannette and growing up in a nomadic, dysfunctional family where her alcoholic father tries his best to distract her from their crushing poverty. It's not exactly the kind of late summer pick-me-up that audiences are craving right now. This will probably draw a mostly adult audience and maybe it will even play well in the coming weeks, but it will open well outside of double digits and will probably fall outside the top five.
It's going to be another slow weekend as August winds down, and it's not going to reverse the trend. I'll be back on Sunday with the details.