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Box Office Time Machine: No. 1 films from 10, 20 and 30 years ago

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Welcome to the Movies Now box office time machine. With “Goosebumps” overtaking “The Martian” for this weekend’s box office supremacy, we look at the No. 1 films from 10, 20 and 30 years ago. Click a film’s title to read The Times review:

2005 -- “Doom,” adapted from the popular video game, debuted atop the chart with $15.5 million ($18.9 million in 2015 dollars). Directed by Andrzej Bartkowiak and starring Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, the movie faded quickly, generating only $28.2 million during its entire domestic run. “Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story,” a family drama for horse lovers starring Kurt Russell and Dakota Fanning, ran second with $11.2 million. Tops in per-screen-average was the May/December romance “Shopgirl,” pairing Steve Martin and a post-”My So Called Life”/pre-”Homeland” Claire Danes. Adapted from Martin’s novella and directed by Anand Tucker, the film underwhelmed critics (61% RT) and grossed only $10 million overall.

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1995 -- “Get Shorty” was the weekend’s top-grossing film at $12.7 million ($19.8 million in 2015 dollars), dethroning David Fincher’s “Seven,” which enjoyed a five-week run at No. 1. “Shorty,” an Elmore Leonard adaptation directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and starring John Travolta, also netted the highest per-screen average. The coming-of-age film “Now and Then,” starring Christina Ricci and Demi Moore, opened in second place with $7.4 million. “Now” was directed by Lesli Linka Glatter, whose long, distinguished career in television includes earning Emmy nominations for directing episodes of “Mad Men” and “Homeland.”

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1985 -- Arnold Schwarzenegger and “Commando” stormed to a third straight week atop the chart with $4.2 million ($9.3 million in 2015 dollars), holding off the Jeff Bridges-Glenn Close thriller “Jagged Edge.” No new films cracked the top 10. The sci-fi drama “The Quiet Earth,” starring Bruno Lawrence and directed by Geoff Murphy, who later directed “Young Guns II,” “Freejack” and “Under Seige 2: Dark Territory,” led the per-screen average.

All figures are from boxofficemojo.com.

kevin.crust@latimes.com

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