These questions will terrify Hollywood this summer

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These questions will terrify Hollywood this summer…

We’re nearly there — summertime.

Grilling in the yard, lounging at the pool, #roseallday. Pretty soon we received’t have a care in the world.

But not Hollywood! For Tinseltown, the next three months imply that a sequence of horrifying existential questions will be posed on a close to weekly foundation.

This is by far the most large film summer — in idea, anyway — since 2019, with “Star Wars,” Spielberg, Christopher Nolan, Marvel, DC, Pixar and a Disney live-action flick all jockeying for place.

There’s a lot of competitors, and all people can’t come out on top. By Labor Day we’ll know who the winners have been and who’s crying under their Los Angeles desks.

Here’s what will have Hollywood actually sweating as the climate heats up.

“The Mandalorian and Grogu” is the first “Star Wars” movie in seven years. ©Walt Disney Co./Courtesy Everett Collection

Is The Force with “Star Wars”?

Remember in 2020 when insane Lucasfilm announced a whopping 10 new “Star Wars” TV sequence for Disney+? 

The studio, which Disney purchased for $4.05 billion in 2012, was using high. The Daisy Ridley sequel trilogy, whatever you suppose of it, did big box workplace. “Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens” stays the highest-grossing home release ever. And the Disney+ app had just launched to large fanfare. 

They have been useless sure the Skywalker sensation would never die down.

Well — help me, Obi Wan Kenobi! — it did. 

Many of those deliberate initiatives have been scrapped and the galaxy far, far-off has struggled to generate vital buzz since. Only now comes the first “Star Wars” wide-release film in seven years, “The Mandalorian and Grogu.”  

Will or not it’s a lightsaber in the darkness? A TV spinoff that hits theaters Memorial Day weekend, the Pedro Pascal flick was made for the comparatively low price of $166.4 million. Smart and smart, like a Jedi.

So, it ought to simply flip a revenue. Baby Yoda is cute. But it’s laborious to image any standalone “Star Wars” film ever topping $1 billion. The franchise is broken.

Disney flew too close to the solar. And the other solar.

Steven Spielberg is returning to his roots with “Disclosure Day.” ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Can Steven Spielberg still make a hit?

Yes, he’s the highest-grossing director of all time. And true, he’s the daddy of the summer blockbuster, who gave us “E.T.,” “Jaws,” “Jurassic Park” and “Indiana Jones.” 

But Spielberg’s last box-office success was “Ready Player One” eight long years in the past. 

After that, his “West Side Story” was a COVID-era flop. And his semi-autobiographical drama “The Fabelmans” obtained a lot of Oscar nominations, but few butts in seats. 

Will Steven get his groove back?

One promising issue is that his new “Disclosure Day,” an unique movie out June 12, reunites Spielberg with some of his most profitable collaborators: aliens.

He hasn’t palled around with martians since “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” approach back in 2008.

I suspect “Disclosure Day” will return to pure popcorn, not status. And as a bonus it stars the favored Emily Blunt, who scored a mega-hit this spring with “The Devil Wears Prada 2.”

Spielberg ought to have a good June. But there’s always chaos idea.   

Milly Alcock stars as Supergirl. ©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

What’s the state of comedian e-book motion pictures?

Key to understanding what the next 12 weeks means for flatlining superhero motion pictures is to acknowledge that Sony and Marvel’s “Spider-Man: Brand New Day” (July 31) has obtained nothing to do with it. 

That one’s a sure factor. Since 2002’s “Spider-Man” with Tobey Maguire, every Spidey flick has been a large hit. Peter Parker will be rolling in the Benjamins as normal.

Much more indicative (and worrisome) is Warner Bros. and DC’s “Supergirl,” starring Milly Alcock from “House of the Dragon.”

Even though she confirmed up briefly at the end of last 12 months’s “Superman” — which did OK, but just OK — most audiences don’t know who Supergirl is. I just realized she’s Superman’s cousin. How good for them.

Demonstrably, there’s not a lot of an urge for food for non-tentpole heroes anymore. Marvel’s “Thunderbolts,” “The Marvels” and “Eternals” all embarrassingly flopped. Even the more heavyweight “Captain America: Brave New World” and “Fantastic Four: First Steps” struggled.

“Supergirl” (June 26) most likely suffers the same destiny as “First Steps” — first rate, not catastrophe — and the flying-Spandex style’s decline continues apace.

Christopher Nolan’s followup to “Oppenheimer” is “The Odyssey.” ©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Will Christopher Nolan repeat “Oppenheimer” with “The Odyssey” on July 17?

Yes.

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