Hollywood's cruel summer of box-office flops has Cineplex hoping to reel in elusive audiences with a cheap movie ticket offer.

Canada's largest movie theatre company says it's putting into effect Tuesday discount pricing for all screenings running from Friday to Aug. 31.

Cineplex said patrons can expect a 30 per cent discount on tickets during those days, with SCENE members receiving an additional 10 per cent discount.

It's an unusual move during a period that's often considered the victory lap after months of huge blockbusters — except this summer hit movies were almost non-existent.

Earlier this month, Cineplex joined other chains in announcing weaker profits as fewer people filled theatres.

Even though Wonder Woman and Guardians of the Galaxy 2 delivered strong results, the number of box-office failures easily outshines the successes.

This image released by Warner Bros. Entertainment shows Gal Gadot in a scene from Wonder Woman, which has been one of this summer's box office winners. (Clay Enos/Warner Bros. Entertainment/Associated Press)

Among the duds, Tom Cruise's The Mummy and King Arthur: Legend of the Sword both disappointed on opening weekend, while huge franchises like Pirates of the Caribbean and Planet of the Apes showed signs of running out of steam.

Without the hits, Cineplex feels the sting on its box-office revenue and at concession stand where hungry moviegoers shell out for marked-up popcorn and drinks.

Any shimmer of hope that August would save the season was quickly dashed when The Dark Tower stumbled out of the gate with $19.2 million its first weekend. It's a mere fraction of the $132 million opening of Suicide Squad at the same time last summer.

"We haven't really had anything of any consequence," said Raymond James analyst Kenric Tyghe. "There's literally been nothing to see."

Summer box office down

The North American summer box-office was off about 13 per cent to $3.63 billion as of Aug. 23, helping to drag down the year's box-office tally by 5.4 per cent, according to comScore senior analyst Paul Dergarabedian.

While some observers have pegged the decline to a growing popularity of low-cost streaming services like Netflix and CraveTV, not everyone is convinced that the notoriously volatile box-office won't pick up again in a few weeks.

"In September the tables turn," Tyghe suggested, pointing to Stephen King's It remake, which is currently projected to break box-office records for the month.

Cineplex is discounting its tickets ahead of another weekend with very little in terms of new offerings.

The Hitman's Bodyguard, last week's No. 1 film, is expected to hold the top spot while an expansion of indie thriller Wind River and a re-release of 1991 Arnold Schwarzenegger flick Terminator 2: Judgement Day in 3D round out the highlights.

Saturday night's hyped pay-per-view fight between UFC fighter Conor McGregor and boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr. is also expected to take a bite out of box-office receipts.