1. I put a lot of energy into supporting cinemas and original ideas very often, and it may surprise you but I still watch and love certain pre-established franchises in many cases. But they're examples that show even the slightest hint of creativity. And by some miracle I somehow still manage to have energy left to express my disdain on projects such as this, that don't. If you are looking forward to this film I'm genuinely happy for you. But I don't see how seeing a negative attitude towards these types of movies in general, should affect your positivity in any way.
2. It's the old supply and demand argument. Supply stems from demand, but again, demand also stems from supply. Sudio executives give people what they think they want but also people learn to expect certain things from those executives after some time. If studios took risks more often, people would find other things to like as well. Like it had been the case for decades in Hollywood, before the reboot frenzy started to occur 20 years ago. There were always adaptations and remakes of certain things but never to this extent.
3. You seem to purposely leave out numerous original movies that did great last year, or at the very least films that don't belong in a cinematic franchise. None of the top 3 did. And even more importantly you don't seem to mention dozens of box office bombs that occurred in established franchises and characters. Six out of seven superhero films bombed like crazy, Transformers, Fast 10, Indiana Jones, movies that used to break records, they all lost a ton of money. You know what else lost money? The Little Mermaid. I myself said it had a great run in the US, but elsewhere people just didn' seem to care at all. It wasn't the first and it surely won't be the last of this bunch. Also you have to understand that the reason Disney animated films are flopping since the pandemic is largely because Chapek tought family audiences to wait until their films hit Disney+. That's a big reason why most Disney and Pixar animation films are losing money compared to other studios like Dreamworks and Illumination where their movies have been perfoming spectacularly well.