The duds just keep coming this summer in North America, from "The Mummy" to "Alien: Covenant" to "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales."
The season has been what critics politely call lackluster for Hollywood studios — but don't expect them to stop churning out more bombs.
That's because as badly as so many franchise films and reboots have done in the world's biggest cinema market, they've racked up solid ticket sales elsewhere. Theatergoers in the United States thought Paramount Pictures' fifth "Transformers" was pretty much a yawner, but in China they liked it. And No. 6 is already in the works.
"Look at the casualties just this summer," said Paul Dergarabedian, a Los Angeles-based analyst for ComScore Inc. "If they only had North America, it would be a monumental disaster for the studios."
For now at least, the rest of the world — China in particular — is supporting Hollywood's love affair with series, sequels and rehashes like "The Mummy," Universal Pictures' new take on a story that's been told dozens of times. The risk is that sequel fatigue will set in overseas too.
Chinese moviegoers are becoming more choosy, and the fastest-growing film market is slowing down. That's a challenge for studios such as Walt Disney and Warner Bros., which plan and schedule movies years in advance.
Jonathan Papish, an analyst for China Film Insider, described as a "disaster" the $250 million that "Transformers: The Last Knight" is projected to record in the world's most-populous country. The reason: the previous version from Viacom's film division pulled in 17 percent more, "a worrisome sign for both Paramount and other Hollywood studios who have become far too complacent thinking that Chinese audiences will swallow whatever garbage they shove down their throats."
This "Transformers" opening in China, at least, was about 30 percent bigger than the opening for the previous one, according to Box Office Mojo.