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Biggest box-office bombs of all time

Discover the biggest box-office bombs of all time — high-budget films that flopped hard. See which movies lost millions and why they failed to win over audiences.

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May 27 2025, Published 4:00 p.m. ET

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    Biggest box-office bombs of all time

    Making an expensive Hollywood movie is kind of like steering a gigantic cargo ship through a thunderstorm.

    On board are hundreds of crew members, each performing a specific function. At the vessel's main helm are a handful of leaders, including the captain (the director), who may still be beholden to the powers that be. Tensions run high, and opinions can clash over the best course of action. It can seem like a miracle when the vessel arrives at its destination intact, but sometimes, it does not.

    In certain situations, it's easy to pinpoint where it all went wrong. Perhaps there were unexpected bumps that required a major change, such as bringing in a new director or having to recast the lead. Or maybe the storyline was simply lackluster, as was the case with 2024's "Kraven the Hunter." The latest in a string of misfires for the Marvel Cinematic Universe, the action pic disappointed critics and earned just $11 million in its opening weekend, a new low for Sony-produced Marvel movies. Other times, even a top-notch director and stellar cast aren't always enough to prevent disaster at the box office. That same year, "Joker: Folie à Deux," for example, was directed by Todd Phillips and starred Lady Gaga opposite Joaquin Phoenix but earned abysmal critical reviews and lost between $150 million and $200 million during its theatrical run.

    In rare cases, a rerelease on digital streaming platforms can give a box-office bomb new life, allowing it to find new audiences and fans on the internet. Kevin Costner's 2024 Western film "Horizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1" became a surprise hit on Netflix after performing poorly at the summer box office, while the widely panned 1996 movie "Striptease," starring Demi Moore, saw interest tick up on Max following Moore's Best Actress loss at the 2025 Academy Awards. While these standouts may have regained their footing eventually, most box-office underachievers are fated to end up as a mere statistic on ranking lists like this one.

    Stacker is honoring the occasions when big-budget vehicles fail to deliver the goods by ranking the biggest box-office bombs of all time using estimates from The Numbers as of May 2025. More than 6,000 movies—every title with data available—were examined to find the biggest financial flops. Rankings were compiled by determining each movie's estimated loss, which is the worldwide box-office earnings minus the reported production budget. The box-office gross does not incorporate video or other retail sales. The calculations also do not reflect the fact that theaters receive a big portion of ticket sales.

    The estimated losses presented may underreport how much money studios were really out, as other expenses like marketing spend, distribution costs, and intellectual property rights are not factored in. Because studios keep those costs close to the vest, most of that data is not public and therefore can't be factored into this ranking, which makes lists like these difficult to calculate. For example, Disney reportedly lost $200 million on its notorious 2012 flop "John Carter" once marketing, distribution, and IP rights are factored in. However, you won't see that movie on this list since the data we do have—its estimated budget of $263.7 million and its worldwide gross of $282.8 million—make it appear as if the film made about $19 million.

    With those caveats in mind, keep reading to discover 50 of the biggest box-office bombs of all time. How many have you seen?

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    #50. Father's Day

    - Estimated loss: $49.3 million- Production budget: $85.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $35.7 million- Release date: May 9, 1997

    Warner Bros. had high expectations for "Father's Day," seeing as it starred Robin Williams and Billy Crystal at the height of their respective careers with comedy veteran Ivan Reitman directing. However, in his 1997 review, Roger Ebert gave the film a one-star rating, calling it "a brainless feature-length sitcom with too much sit and no com." Meanwhile, this film was just one among many major disappointments for the studio that year.

    #49. The Great Raid

    - Estimated loss: $49.4 million- Production budget: $60.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $10.6 million- Release date: Aug. 12, 2005

    "The Great Raid" dramatizes the Raid at Cabanatuan, when American soldiers and Filipino resistance guerrilla fighters joined forces to rescue Allied prisoners from a Japanese POW camp. The film had all the makings of a hit: a dramatic, action-packed storyline; an all-star cast including James Franco, Benjamin Bratt, Connie Nielsen, and Joseph Fiennes; and the backing of a major studio. However, critics were less than impressed by its slow pacing, reliance on overdone war movie cliches, and the film's bizarre romance subplot.

    #48. Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return

    - Estimated loss: $49.9 million- Production budget: $70.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $20.1 million- Release date: May 9, 2014

    Based on the book "Dorothy of Oz" by L. Frank Baum's grandson, Roger Stanton Baum, this computer-animated children's movie follows our Kansas girl as she returns to the magical city to help save it from a villainous Jester. Despite having a star-studded cast including Lea Michele, Dan Aykroyd, Jim Belushi, Kelsey Grammer, Hugh Dancy, Oliver Platt, Patrick Stewart, and Martin Short, the film was a total flop thanks to its bland plot, cardboard-like characters, terrible animation, and bizarre original songs. The film lost so much money that it caused the studio that produced it, Summertime Entertainment, which was embroiled in investor lawsuits, to shut down completely.

    #47. Kraven the Hunter

    - Estimated loss: $50.0 million- Production budget: $110.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $60.0 million- Release date: Aug. 29, 2024

    Set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, "Kraven the Hunter" explores the backstory of Kraven, a supervillain who frequently appears in Spider-Man tales. Starring Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the titular character and Russell Crowe as his estranged father, the casting was the only thing the movie did right. Stilted dialogue, uneven pacing, and a plot that was haphazardly stitched together doomed this CGI-heavy film from the start.

    #46. Hard Rain

    - Estimated loss: $50.1 million- Production budget: $70.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $19.9 million- Release date: Jan. 16, 1998

    This 1998 actioner ups the stakes by pitting an armored truck driver (Christian Slater) against a gang of thieves (led by Morgan Freeman) during a catastrophic rainstorm. A disaster film in every sense, "Hard Rain" was plagued by many problems during filming and in post-production. After a series of reshoots and delays, the movie came out around the same time Slater was dealing with a major scandal involving heavy drug use and violent behavior. Between that and the negative reviews, it was dead on arrival.

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    #45. Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000

    - Estimated loss: $50.3 million- Production budget: $80.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $29.7 million- Release date: May 12, 2000

    More than a mere box-office bomb, "Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000" is one of the most ridiculed flops of all time. This big-budget sci-fi thriller, which depicts the future rebellion of humankind against alien overlords (aka Psychlos), was penned by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. Flaunting long dreadlocks and bad teeth, John Travolta plays a Psychlo named Terl. Travolta, a Scientologist, was a producer on the film as well.

    #44. Blackhat

    - Estimated loss: $50.3 million- Production budget: $70.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $19.7 million- Release date: Jan. 16, 2015

    After making a string of notable films in the mid-to-late 1990s, director Michael Mann's output became uneven at best, culminating with this 2015 fiasco. The movie, bogged down by cheap-looking cinematography and a muddled storyline, sees Chris Hemsworth tackling a global ring of cyber terrorists. Most moviegoers didn't show up to see "Blackhat," and those who did were largely underwhelmed.

    #43. Amsterdam

    - Estimated loss: $50.6 million- Production budget: $80.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $29.4 million- Release date: Oct. 6, 2022

    Three friends—a doctor (Christian Bale), a nurse (Margot Robbie), and a lawyer (John David Washington)—work together to solve the potential murder of a retired army general. Set in the 1930s and based on a real-life conspiracy, this period mystery lacked the rhythm and coherence needed to make it shine. Despite a strong promotional push, the movie wound up losing the studio over $100 million.

    #42. R.I.P.D.

    - Estimated loss: $50.9 million- Production budget: $130.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $79.1 million- Release date: July 19, 2013

    Jeff Bridges and Ryan Reynolds might sound like a match made in Hollywood heaven, but the two actors simply couldn't make 2013's "R.I.P.D." work. Based on a comic book, the film comes off as a poorly executed "Men in Black" imitation with the walking undead substituted for aliens.

    #41. Reminiscence

    - Estimated loss: $51.6 million- Production budget: $68.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $16.4 million- Release date: Aug. 18, 2021

    "Reminiscence" isn't a bad film by any stretch of the imagination—it's just not quite as good as producers Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan's other project, "Westworld." Both media pieces feature similar themes and are neo-noir, science fiction stories, which led audiences to compare the two. In the end, viewers felt "Westworld" was more original and unique than "Reminiscence." The favoritism showed in the lackluster ticket sales.

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    #40. Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within

    - Estimated loss: $51.9 million- Production budget: $137.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $85.1 million- Release date: July 11, 2001

    When making an expensive film based on a video game, it's probably wise to avoid discarding the elements that made the game such a big hit in the first place. But that's what this 2001 movie did, and the result was an epic financial disaster. Much of the film's budget went toward employing photorealistic computer animation, quite groundbreaking for its time and a primary selling point, but it fell flat with audiences and critics.

    #39. Knights of the Zodiac

    - Estimated loss: $53.0 million- Production budget: $60.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $7.0 million- Release date: March 25, 2023

    Live-action adaptations of animated properties rarely work out as well as studios hope. "Knights of the Zodiac," an adaptation of the manga series "Saint Seiya," is a prime example of this. Critics, like Carlos Aguilar at the Los Angeles Times, pointed to the movie's attempts to appeal to die-hard fans of the series and wider audiences at the same time, as well as the movie's low production values, as the primary reasons for its failure at the box office.

    #38. Eye See You

    - Estimated loss: $53.2 million- Production budget: $55.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $1.8 million- Release date: Sept. 20, 2002

    Alternatively titled "D-Tox," "Eye See You" is an early '00s thriller starring Sylvester Stallone about a cop who finds himself being stalked by a serial killer while stuck at a rehab center. It seems Universal Pictures was aware they had a flop on their hands before it even released the film. After putting the project through multiple rounds of reshoots, it released the movie overseas months before giving it a much more limited U.S. release. Danny Graydon for the BBC said the movie was "a boring, formulaic mix of serial killers and stalk'n'slash, this will not reinvigorate Sly's action hero status or loosen his maniacal destruction of the quality control button."

    #37. Timeline

    - Estimated loss: $53.3 million- Production budget: $80.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $26.7 million- Release date: Nov. 26, 2003

    Adapted from the bestselling novel by Michael Crichton, this 2003 adventure flick follows a group of archaeologists who travel back in time to 14th-century France. The film might have cost $80 million to produce—$109 million when adjusted for inflation—but critics felt it looked downright cheap. That's without mentioning its muddled plot, poor writing, cheesy tone, and stiff acting. Audiences weren't too excited about it either.

    #36. Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins

    - Estimated loss: $53.3 million- Production budget: $88.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $34.7 million- Release date: July 21, 2021

    Intended as a reboot of the G.I. Joe franchise, "Snake Eyes: G.I. Joe Origins" was not the fun, campy romp fans hoped it would be. Instead, the film was a dull, poorly shot feature whose only real purpose seemed to be setting the stage for future installments in the series. The only bright spot in the entire thing was Henry Golding's performance.

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    #35. Lolita

    - Estimated loss: $53.9 million- Production budget: $55.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $1.1 million- Release date: July 22, 1998

    This second screen adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's iconic novel, this version of "Lolita" starred Jeremy Irons, Dominique Swain, Melanie Griffith, and Frank Langella. Much of the film's box-office failure had to do with protests over its content—it took a full year after the movie was completed for it to find a U.S. distributor—and its more accepting attitude of the darker sexual elements of the story.

    #34. Ferrari

    - Estimated loss: $54.0 million- Production budget: $95.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $41.0 million- Release date: Dec. 14, 2023

    "Ferrari" follows the personal and professional struggles of Enzo Ferrari (the brand's founder) during the lead up to the 1957 Mille Miglia. Adam Driver stars alongside Penélope Cruz, Shailene Woodley, and Patrick Dempsey. Although some critics, like RogerEbert.com Managing Editor Brian Tallerico, loved it, praising the crafting and cinematography, others found the pacing and lack of momentum of any kind off-putting. Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian wrote that the movie had "a stolid, almost joyless determination" in telling the story—not exactly the sort of praise that would drive audiences into theaters.

    #33. Lucky Numbers

    - Estimated loss: $55.0 million- Production budget: $65.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $10.0 million- Release date: Oct. 27, 2000

    "Lucky Numbers" proved anything but lucky once its numbers came in. Directed by Nora Ephron ("Sleepless in Seattle"), the comedy follows a down-and-out weatherman (John Travolta) as he engages in a lottery scheme. Why the movie cost so much to make is anyone's guess. It came out the same year as "Battlefield Earth," proving the year 2000 was simply not a good one for Travolta.

    #32. The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run

    - Estimated loss: $55.2 million- Production budget: $60.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $4.8 million- Release date: July 31, 2020

    The third installment in the "SpongeBob" movie franchise, "Sponge on the Run," follows everyone's favorite yellow sea sponge as he sets out to rescue his pet snail, Gary, who has been kidnapped. Alongside the series' regular cast, a host of celebrities, like Snoop Dogg, Awkwafina, Tiffany Haddish, Keanu Reeves, and Danny Trejo, lent their voices to the project. Generally well-received by critics and audiences alike, the movie suffered at the box office due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw theaters around the world shut down entirely or greatly reduce their capacities and showtimes.

    #31. Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever

    - Estimated loss: $55.7 million- Production budget: $70.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $14.3 million- Release date: Sept. 20, 2002

    A skilled FBI agent (Antonio Banderas) must team up with his mortal enemy (Lucy Liu) to take down a common enemy in this 2002 clunker. More than just a huge box-office bomb, it holds the distinction of having a 0% Rotten Tomatoes score.

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    #30. The 355

    - Estimated loss: $56.1 million- Production budget: $75.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $18.9 million- Release date: Jan. 6, 2022

    A group of spies from organizations worldwide must work together to prevent WWIII in this action flick. Jessica Chastain, Penélope Cruz, Fan Bingbing, Diane Kruger, and Lupita Nyong'o starred in this film written and directed by Simon Kinberg. It seems the film's online marketing was to blame for its box-office failure, as it led many fans to believe the movie would be more clichéd and unimaginative than it actually is.

    #29. Osmosis Jones

    - Estimated loss: $56.4 million- Production budget: $70.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $13.6 million- Release date: Aug. 10, 2001

    Decades before Pixar's "Inside Out" took viewers inside the human brain, this 2001 animated flick explored the wonders of the human body—a zookeeper named Frank DeTorre's body, to be exact. By swallowing a contaminated egg, Frank (Bill Murray) unleashes a deadly virus that could potentially destroy him from the inside out. It's up to a white blood cell named Osmosis Jones to save the day—with help from a cold pill, of course. Directed by gross-out kings the Farrelly brothers and featuring voices from various comedic talent, the movie kept things strictly PG, appealing to essentially no one as a result.

    #28. The Informer

    - Estimated loss: $56.6 million- Production budget: $60.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $3.4 million- Release date: Aug. 30, 2019

    In this 2019 thriller, an ex-convict intentionally gets himself incarcerated again so that he can infiltrate the mob. Based on a Swedish crime novel called "Three Minutes," the movie suffered from a "TV-procedural quality," according to Guy Lodge of Variety, and felt more like a recycled string of tropes than an original entry into the genre.

    #27. Playmobil: The Movie

    - Estimated loss: $58.7 million- Production budget: $75.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $16.3 million- Release date: Aug. 7, 2019

    Set in the world of Playmobil toys (which, for the uninitiated, are adjacent to Legos) this animated children's movie follows a young girl as she attempts to save her brother after he's sucked into this make-believe universe. Like many other movies on this list, it had quite the star-studded cast—Anya Taylor-Joy, Jim Gaffigan, Adam Lambert, Kenan Thompson, Meghan Trainor, Daniel Radcliffe—but their star power wasn't enough to save it from being a commercial failure. Most viewers felt the film was just a glorified advertisement and that both the plot and original musical numbers came second to selling more toys.

    #26. The Postman

    - Estimated loss: $59.2 million- Production budget: $80.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $20.8 million- Release date: Dec. 25, 1997

    One might hear the words "Kevin Costner flop" and think of movies like "Waterworld," but "The Postman" remains his biggest box-office bomb. Costner directed and starred in the film, which takes place in post-apocalyptic America and follows a self-made postman as he delivers mail. If you're not intrigued, neither were movie crowds—it failed abysmally.

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    #25. Renfield

    - Estimated loss: $59.3 million- Production budget: $86.2 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $26.9 million- Release date: April 6, 2023

    In "Renfield," we follow the story of Dracula (Nicolas Cage) and his servant (Nicholas Hoult), who has been forced to capture prey for his master for centuries. The premise may sound perfectly campy, but in practice, it's a rarely funny schlep through 90 minutes of thinly disguised therapy speak about toxic relationships. Its only redeeming qualities are Nicolas Cage's solo scenes and its perfectly executed gory scenes.

    #24. Soldier

    - Estimated loss: $60.4 million- Production budget: $75.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $14.6 million- Release date: Oct. 23, 1998

    Another dud from Paul W.S. Anderson, this 1998 movie takes place in a future society where soldiers are trained from birth. One of those soldiers is Todd 3465 (Kurt Russell), who's left for dead on a distant planet and is eventually tasked with fighting off a new breed of trained killers. The film mostly comes across as a knock-off of "Universal Soldier."

    #23. Stealth

    - Estimated loss: $61.6 million- Production budget: $138.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $76.4 million- Release date: July 29, 2005

    An action-movie veteran with four decades of experience under his belt, director Rob Cohen has run the full gamut in terms of quality, though most of his films are considered pretty bad. Meanwhile, this 2005 atrocity remains his biggest bomb to date. In the movie, starring Jessica Biel and Jamie Foxx, three pilots struggle to contain an artificial intelligence program before it kicks off a world war.

    #22. Fly Me to the Moon

    - Estimated loss: $61.8 million- Production budget: $100.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $38.2 million- Release date: July 5, 2024

    Set against the backdrop of the Apollo 11 mission, "Fly Me to the Moon" follows an ad executive (Scarlett Johansson) and a NASA launch director (Channing Tatum) as they fall in love and work together to prepare a false moon landing in case the real mission fails. If that plot sounds like a lot to you, you're not alone. The chief complaint of most critics and audience members was that the mix of historical elements and romantic plotlines didn't quite gel, leaving the film feeling disjointed and imbalanced.

    #21. The 13th Warrior

    - Estimated loss: $63.3 million- Production budget: $125.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $61.7 million- Release date: Aug. 27, 1999

    Originally named "Eaters of the Dead," the title of the Michael Crichton novel upon which it was based, this John McTiernan film underwent drastic re-edits and a name change before arriving in theaters. Such significant restructuring only added to the movie's already bloated production costs and subsequent losses. In the film, Antonio Banderas plays a prophesied warrior who helps a clan of Vikings fend off an enemy threat.

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    #20. Monster Trucks

    - Estimated loss: $63.4 million- Production budget: $125.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $61.6 million- Release date: Dec. 29, 2016

    Representing Paramount Animation's first live-action film and 2017's first major flop, "Monster Trucks" chronicles the adventures of a young boy and his oil-eating creature friend. Long before the movie was released, early reactions to the trailer ranged from muted to scathing—the outlook was so grim that Paramount's parent company, Viacom, declared the film a write-down before it even premiered.

    #19. Onward

    - Estimated loss: $66.6 million- Production budget: $200.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $133.4 million- Release date: Feb. 28, 2020

    Disney-Pixar's "Onward," about two elf brothers who set out to find a magical artifact that will bring their deceased father back to life for 24 hours, was one of the first film victims of the COVID-19 pandemic. Released just a week before most theaters around the country shut down to help stem the spread of the virus, the movie was simply unable to sell tickets and recoup production costs. Still, it managed to be a critical and audience favorite once it hit streaming services, earning nominations for Best Animated Feature Film at the Golden Globes and Academy Awards.

    #18. The Alamo

    - Estimated loss: $68.1 million- Production budget: $92.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $23.9 million- Release date: April 9, 2004

    What began as a project intended for Ron Howard ended up in the hands of John Lee Hancock, and things only got worse from there. True to its name, the movie depicts the famous 1836 showdown, where Davy Crockett (Billy Bob Thornton) and James Bowie (Jason Patric) helped a relatively small group of Texans and Tejano men fend off a Mexican army of more than 2,000 soldiers. The battle might have been victorious, but the film was an outright failure for Disney.

    #17. Devotion

    - Estimated loss: $68.5 million- Production budget: $90.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $21.5 million- Release date: Nov. 23, 2022

    In this biographical drama, two Navy fighter pilots prove their friendship and loyalty during the Korean War. Jonathan Majors plays Ensign Jesse L. Brown, the first Black naval aviator, and Glenn Powell is Lieutenant Tom Hudner. Despite positive reviews from critics and the movie's determination to stay away from the cliches and stereotypes that usually dominate films of this type, the movie got lost in the hype surrounding "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" and lost Columbia Pictures $89.2 million.

    #16. The Nutcracker in 3D

    - Estimated loss: $69.5 million- Production budget: $90.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $20.5 million- Release date: Nov. 24, 2010

    Financed primarily by Russian bankers, though filmed in English, this 2010 film barely penetrated the U.S. market and earned just $13.9 million in Russia. Consequently, the investors reportedly lost up to 90% of their backing. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky's masterful ballet will live on, but this poorly received adaptation has already been forgotten.

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    #15. Monkeybone

    - Estimated loss: $69.6 million- Production budget: $75.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $5.4 million- Release date: Feb. 23, 2001

    According to actor Rose McGowan, "Monkeybone" could have been an incredible movie had Fox Studios not fired its original director, Henry Selick. Instead, the film—about a cartoonist (Brendan Fraser) who gets trapped in a world of his own creation—remains one of the biggest flops of all time.

    #14. The Last Duel

    - Estimated loss: $69.9 million- Production budget: $100.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $30.1 million- Release date: Oct. 13, 2021

    If you ask director Ridley Scott why he thought this Ben Affleck-Matt Damon-written film was a box-office failure, he'd tell you it was all millennials' fault. In an interview, Scott said millennials simply weren't interested in anything beyond their cellphones, and that's why no one bought tickets to the film. No word on whether he thought its subject (the true story of the last trial by combat in medieval France) or the film's slow pacing may have had anything to do with it losing nearly $70 million.

    #13. How Do You Know?

    - Estimated loss: $70.4 million- Production budget: $120.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $49.6 million- Release date: Dec. 17, 2010

    As the man behind shows like "The Simpsons" and movies like "Broadcast News," James L. Brooks is responsible for some of Hollywood's finest offerings. This 2010 dramedy is not one of them. Starring Reese Witherspoon, Owen Wilson, Jack Nicholson, and Paul Rudd, the movie finds its protagonist (Witherspoon) in the middle of a light-hearted love triangle. Brooks decided to reshoot the beginning and end after completing the film, thereby inflating its already outrageous budget. Meanwhile, the lead actors earned a combined payday of $50 million, which didn't help the bottom line either.

    #12. Chaos Walking

    - Estimated loss: $72.9 million- Production budget: $100.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $27.1 million- Release date: Feb. 3, 2021

    Set on a planet where everyone can hear each other's thoughts and women have ceased to exist, "Chaos Walking" follows a man (Tom Holland) as he seeks to protect a girl (Daisy Ridley) who has crashlanded in his backyard. Early viewers critiqued the film for its disjointed storylines, uneven pacing, and underdeveloped characters. Combined with the negative critical reception it received, the film was certain to become a box-office failure.

    #11. Cutthroat Island

    - Estimated loss: $73.5 million- Production budget: $92.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $18.5 million- Release date: Dec. 22, 1995

    Geena Davis and Matthew Modine are a pair of pirates in this legendary turkey from Davis' then-husband, Renny Harlin. In later interviews, Harlin blamed part of the film's failure on production company Carolco, which was going under at the time. Another element in the film's demise? Harlin's own hubris in the wake of successful efforts like "Die Hard 2" and "Cliffhanger." A handful of poor casting choices didn't help either. Consequently, "Cutthroat Island" went down like a hole-ridden ship.

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    #10. A Sound of Thunder

    - Estimated loss: $73.7 million- Production budget: $80.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $6.3 million- Release date: Sept. 2, 2005

    Adapting a classic short story by Ray Bradbury, this 2005 sci-fi film explores the unintended effects of time travel. The movie features a scientist who travels back in time to the dinosaur era, strays off the designated path, and changes history in catastrophic ways. "The Simpsons" tackled the very same premise in a "Treehouse of Horror" segment.

    #9. The Promise

    - Estimated loss: $79.4 million- Production budget: $90.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $10.6 million- Release date: April 21, 2017

    Billionaire Kirk Kerkorian was eager to see a big-budget movie about the Armenian genocide of 1915, so he paid for most of it himself. The result was this 2017 historical drama that floundered at the box office. That's in part due to some aggressive opposition from the Turkish government, though lukewarm critical reception certainly didn't help. Adding to its tragedy, Kerkorian passed away before production began.

    #8. Soul

    - Estimated loss: $79.9 million- Production budget: $200.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $120.1 million- Release date: Dec. 24, 2020

    This Pixar-Disney animated feature follows a middle school band teacher who falls into a coma after an accident, and works to reunite his soul and body before his upcoming jazz performance. The project won rave reviews and garnered three Academy Award nominations, taking home the Oscar for Best Animated Feature. However, "Soul" still classifies as a box-office flop because it was released straight to streaming, and only a handful of viewers paid to watch it in theaters.

    #7. Moonfall

    - Estimated loss: $90.9 million- Production budget: $150.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $59.1 million- Release date: Feb. 3, 2022

    One of the most expensive independent films ever made, "Moonfall," is about a group of former astronauts and conspiracy theorists who discover the truth about the moon after it suddenly leaves Earth's orbit. Anxieties about a possible COVID-19-induced shutdown (which affected how many theaters the movie was sent to) and mixed critical reviews led this project to be a commercial failure.

    #6. The Adventures of Pluto Nash

    - Estimated loss: $92.9 million- Production budget: $100.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $7.1 million- Release date: Aug. 16, 2002

    After spending nearly two decades in development, "The Adventures of Pluto Nash" finally arrived in theaters in 2002 and swiftly became one of the most infamous duds of the modern era. Starring Eddie Murphy as a lunar nightclub owner in the year 2087, the film went big on camp and short on laughs—a significant drop in quality compared to the actor's better films. Murphy later said in an interview: "I know two or three people that liked this movie."

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    #5. Town & Country

    - Estimated loss: $94.6 million- Production budget: $105.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $10.4 million- Release date: April 27, 2001

    In a textbook case of movie-making gone awry, this disaster reportedly started with a production budget of around $44 million, which climbed to $75 million after several big names—namely Diane Keaton, Garry Shandling, Goldie Hawn, and Warren Beatty—joined the cast. The costs only escalated from there, and that was before the extensive reshoots in the wake of negative test screenings. Ultimately, it took three years for the movie—about the farcical exploits of an architect (Beatty)—to arrive on the big screen, where it went down in flames.

    #4. Argylle

    - Estimated loss: $103.8 million- Production budget: $200.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $96.2 million- Release date: Jan. 31, 2024

    Boston.com critic Kevin Slane wrote that "Argylle" was "one of the worst movies I've ever seen, full stop." The spy comedy was marketed as a sort of "Knives Out" and "Kingsman" mashup, with an incredible cast (Henry Cavill, Bryce Dallas Howard, Sam Rockwell, Bryan Cranston, Catherine O'Hara, Dua Lipa, Ariana DeBose, John Cena, and Samuel L. Jackson all star) and massive budget of $200 million. But despite having all of the makings of a blockbuster, its lengthy run time of 139 minutes, convoluted plotlines, and distracting use of CGI doomed it to the slush pile.

    #3. Strange World

    - Estimated loss: $105.3 million- Production budget: $180.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $74.7 million- Release date: Nov. 22, 2022

    The Cades, a legendary family of explorers, must overcome their differences to save their planet in this animated Disney feature. One of Disney's biggest theatrical flops in recent years, the movie grossly underperformed at the box office for several reasons, including mixed critical reviews, a lack of word-of-mouth buzz, and confusion over whether or not it would be immediately available on streaming platforms (like its predecessors "Soul," "Luca," and "Turning Red" had been). Then there was also the inclusion of an openly LGBTQ+ character, which led to Disney pulling the movie from smaller, more conservative markets where it would have been challenged.

    #2. Mars Needs Moms

    - Estimated loss: $110.5 million- Production budget: $150.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $39.5 million- Release date: March 11, 2011

    This already forgotten Disney film, which cost more than $150 million to make, earned just over $6 million on its opening weekend. Produced by Robert Zemeckis, the film employs motion-capture animation, giving it an off-putting aesthetic. Whatever the reason, the stink on this one was so powerful that Disney removed the word "Mars" from an upcoming film title. That film was "John Carter," which tanked anyway.

    #1. Turning Red

    - Estimated loss: $162.7 million- Production budget: $175.0 million- Worldwide box-office gross: $12.3 million- Release date: March 10, 2022

    "Turning Red," an animated Disney feature about a young girl who turns into a red panda whenever she feels intense emotion thanks to a hereditary curse, is perhaps one of the best films to come from the studio in recent years. With a 95% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and several major award nominations, including Academy Award, Golden Globe, Critics' Choice, and BAFTA nods, the reception for the project was largely positive. But with Disney electing to scrap its worldwide theatrical release plans due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the box-office numbers from the handful of theaters it was released in hardly reflect that.

    Story editing by Cynthia Rebolledo. Copy editing by Robert Wickwire.

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