1.2064098-4248480409
This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Cillian Murphy, standing, in a scene from "Dunkirk." (Melissa Sue Gordon/Warner Bros. Pictures via AP) Image Credit: AP

Christopher Nolan made headlines this week when he bashed Netflix, saying he would never work with the streaming company because it doesn’t support theatrical releases. And judging by how well his new Second World War drama Dunkirk is faring at the box office this weekend, his movies will have a place on the big screen for years to come.

The movie has collected nearly $20 million (Dh73.44 million) since opening on Thursday evening, according to an estimate from distributor Warner Bros. That puts the film on track to gross over $50 million by weekend’s end — about $10 million beyond the studio’s expectations.

The critically praised picture, which cost about $150 million to produce, tells the story of a mission to save thousands of Allied troops from a beach in France during the Second World War. Audiences that have seen the movie so far — which are 60 per cent male — give the movie an average grade of A-minus, per market research firm CinemaScore.

That’s not quite as strong as the A-plus earned by Girls Trip. The R-rated comedy about four old friends who reunite for a raucous weekend in New Orleans took in $11 million on Friday. The Universal Pictures release is projected to gross around $30 million by Monday morning.

However, the weekend’s third wide release, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets, is not faring as well. Luc Besson’s sci-fi flick that cost $180 million to produce — making it one of the priciest independent films ever — took in just $6.5 million on Friday.

The movie, which stars Dane DeHaan and Cara Delevingne, may reach an opening-weekend total of just $16 million or so. That’s even less than pre-release surveys indicated it would launch with — and a B-minus CinemaScore isn’t helping while possibly portending a steep decline in ticket sales in the coming weeks.