Christopher Nolan's World War II epic from the air, the land, and the sea - and the effort to rescue 400,000 Allied troops pinned on the beaches of Dunkirk, , who were surrounded by German forces.
Dunkirk has tremendous momentum going into the weekend, thanks to nearly across-the-board acclaim from critics, and speculation that the film The Dark Knight, which earned a 94 percent "fresh" rating.
By contrast, Valerian appeared doomed as it approached its theatrical opening on Friday. Based on the acclaimed comic book series Valerian and Laureline, the film finds the duo (Dane DeHaan and Cara Delevingne) desperately trying to protect the metropolis of Alpha (the home to species from a thousand planets), as well as the galaxy. Despite huge acclaim from the likes of Oscar-winning director Peter Jackson, critics were decidedly mixed about the film, praising its visual effects yet calling it out as an early contender for the Razzies. The film ended up with a "rotten" aggregate score of 54 percent on Rotten Tomatoes.
Related: 15 Things You Need to Know about Dunkirk
According to War for the Planet of the Apes (20.4 million).
Overseas, Dunkirk's opening was equally as impressive. Deadline reports that the film opened with $55.4 million in international ticket sales, including $12.4 million in England (which topped all overseas markets) $4.9 million in .
With its disastrous opening, Valerian becomes the latest big-budget movie to hit the wall at this summer's domestic box office, preceded by the likes of Transformers: the Last Knight. If studios haven't gotten the memo by this point, clearly its a signal that very few old-school tentpole franchise movies resonate with audiences anymore.
With the success of Dunkirk, does it mean that audiences will see more historical tales taking on summer popcorn flicks in the future? The answer is unlikely considering Nolan is a rare filmmaker whose work transcends all genres and box office expectations. Despite the writer-director's impressive track record, even box office analysts were off in their predictions for Dunkirk, pegging the film for an opening in the $30 million to $40 million range just a couple weeks ago.
If there's any certainty to this summer's box office, analysts, critics and audiences should never underestimate Nolan; and on the flip side, never assume that a movie is going to be a massive hit because of the hundreds of millions of dollars it takes to make it.