Leslie Grace Martinez, Batgirl Photos @lesliegrace
While most movie industry watchers expected the WarnerMedia and Discovery merger to bring about major changes, few predicted that the now finalized bad girl would never see the light of day.
With movie studios trying to get as many movies as possible out of whatever comic book IPs they control, the idea of demolishing a DC movie that featured Michael Keaton’s return as Batman was unthinkable for many.
But while such a high-profile film being removed in favor of a tax deduction is a new phenomenon in Hollywood, bad girl it is far from the first completed film that will never see the light of day. Hollywood history is littered with controversial films that ultimately weren’t released for multiple reasons.
In this sense, IndieWire made the following list … For the foreseeable future, these eight films are out of reach for American viewers.
bad girl (by Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah)
Discovery shocked Hollywood recently when it announced it bad girlan original HBO Max superhero movie coming out, would not be released. The studio decided to use the discarded film as a tax deduction. because it didn’t fit the Warner Bros. broadcast or theatrical strategies.
The move sparked a lot of outrage across the film industry, as both artists and fans were concerned about the precedents it might create.
“We are saddened and shocked by the news. We still can’t believe itThe film’s directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah said in a statement. “As directors, it is imperative that our work is shown to the public and, although the film was far from finished, we would like fans around the world to have had the opportunity to see and embrace the final film.”
I love you dad (from Louis CK)
Louis CK was trying to establish himself as a serious director with I love you dad when they arose multiple allegations of sexual misconduct against him before its expected release in 2017. Although the comedian has released another feature film, Fourth of July, I love you, dad he has never seen the light of day.
The film addresses a particularly uncomfortable subject given what we now know about CK, as he plays a TV producer who discovers that his daughter is having a romantic relationship with a much older man.
southern song (by Harve Foster and Wilfred Jackson)
A Disney animated film about a former slave who Telling two white kids how life was better in the simpler days before the Civil War is a terrible idea by 2022 standards. It was also a terrible idea by 1946 standards.
Years after, Southern song continues to haunt the legacy of the brand. But while they produced some classic Disney songs that you might find yourself humming from time to time, the company went to great lengths to erase the film from our collective memory.
Although it has received an official version, it is no longer available to own or stream. Disney also revised the Splash Mountain ride at Disney World in 2020 to remove any references to the characters.
The day the clown cried (from Jerry Lewis)
During the years, The day the clown cried by Jerry Lewis was one of the last holy grails for viewers. The 1972 film, starring Lewis as a circus clown incarcerated in a Nazi concentration camp, was never released due to the controversial topic and Lewis dissatisfaction with the final product.
For years, viewers have wondered what could have made the film seemingly so horrible. Harry Shearer, who saw a preview version of the film, suggested it’s worse than anyone could imagine.
“Watching this film was really impressive, as you rarely find yourself in the presence of a perfect object”Shearer said. “It was a perfect object. This film is so drastically wrong, its pathos and comedy so out of place that you couldn’t, in your fantasy of what it could be, improve on what it really is. “
Although Lewis always insisted that the film would never see the light of day, he eventually relented and donated it to the Library of Congress at the end of his life. It has determined that the film will not be shown before 2024so the Jerry Lewis finalists will have to wait a little longer to see it.
All Star Weekend (Jamie Foxx)
Jamie Foxx finished production on his directorial debut All Star Weekend more than five years ago, but he also doesn’t think the film will hit theaters soon. Foxx recently talked about how the film’s edgy humor, which already sees Foxx playing a white cop, is unlikely to do so. Robert Downey Jr. plays a Mexican manresonate with today’s audiences.
She’s been tough with the lay-out in regards to the comedy, ”Foxx said recently when asked about plans for the film’s release. “We are trying to open the sensitive corners where people laugh again. We hope to make you laugh and take you straight to the All-Star Weekend because surely we would have made it. “
gore (by Michael Hoffmann)
When Netflix cut all ties with Kevin Spacey after the accusation of sexual assault by Anthony Rapp in 2017 against him, Spacey had already finished production gorea biopic on Netflix that saw it as the infamous provocateur Gore Vidal. The decision not to release the film makes even more sense in light of the news that the film included scenes of Vidal de Spacey attempting to seduce younger men.
Mektoub, My Love: Intermezzo (by Abdellatif Kechiche)
One of the worst premieres received in Cannes in recent times was Mektoub, My Love: Intermezzoa film referred to by David Ehrlich IndieWire called “a four-hour lap dance of a movie consisting mostly of butt close-ups”. The follow-up to 2019 by Mektoub, My Love: Canto Uno it was so ridiculed by critics that it was unable to guarantee European distribution until the end of 2022 and the producers have indicated that the film will never be released in the United States.
Fantastic Four (by Oley Sassone)
In a time before comic book intellectual property was Hollywood’s most valuable currency, producer Bernd Eichinger once held the rights to the Fantastic Four from Marvel. Faced with the prospect of losing those rights because he hadn’t shot a movie yet, he was quick to produce a low-budget version of the property. with the king of B movies, Roger Corman.
The resulting film was made so cheap that a Marvel executive paid Corman and Eichinger the money they spent on the film to keep it from coming out.
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Source: Clarin