Absolutely, Kubo deserves our money more than any sequel or reboot because if we don't support films like it we'll very rarely get any major original animated films. And maybe this year's incredibly weak summer box office is starting to show that audiences are getting tired of the same old thing.
Or they just want to wait until it hits streaming so they can watch them on the toilet when they pinch one out. The thing that really bugs me is that, sure, for every massive flop piece of crap we had this year that anyone can whine about the lack of originality, they didn't exactly take to the
actual original films, especially the comedies, either. I get the whole "Fffweelll! Hollywood wouldn't know an original idea if it bit them in the face" bit, but...pay to see comedies and other offbeat movies in theaters if you want to make that statement. Sure, I didn't get to see Keanu either, but if the general public is that annoyed by how crappy movies were this summer, why did that film barely open at a 9 million and just get dumped to DVD with not so much as an ad for it?
I get the reasoning behind Disney making these live action remakes of their movies, and up until the sequel to Alice in Wonderland (a style over substance movie made for Tim Burton's pseudo-goth fangirl fanbase to begin with), they had a steady stream of hits. I still don't get the desire or need to remake Pete's Dragon, though. Jungle Book, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty. Those were all big Disney films that at the very least became classics in time. Pete's Dragon is relatively forgotten unless you're a die hard Disney fan. And I agree with Michael Caine that if you absolutely
have to remake a movie, remake something no one remembers that was a flop to being with. That's why we all know Dirty Rotten Scoundrels to the point a musical version was made of it. But Pete's Dragon still looks like that Harry Potter wannabe fantasy film trend that's been around since last decade. Same reason BFG flopped. These kinds of magical adventure live action kid films just died out when the last Potter film was released. Not that they were ever a thing.