
2016 was year of
record-breaking movies, however it was also a year of abysmal box office
performances, and not even established directors (Ang Lee, Steven Spielberg), A-list
stars (Mark Wahlberg, Brad Pitt, Chris Hemsworth), or Disney, which set a new
record with over $7 billion in ticket sales, managed to end the year without
some blemishes.

Deepwater Horizon

2016 saw the release
of two Peter Berg movies starring Mark Wahlberg, the first of which, Deepwater
Horizon, managed to be as much of a box office disaster as the story in which
it is based on. With a production budget set somewhere near the $110 to $120
million, Deepwater Horizon grossed $118 million worldwide, a far cry from the
$180 to $190 it needed to break-even.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadow

The second
installment in the new franchise centered in the heroes in a half shell grossed
$245 million in theaters worldwide. The June release cost $135 million to
produce before adding the expensive marketing campaign, and as such, it lost at
least roughly $75 million.
Incidentally, the $245
million the movie made is about half as much as what the first movie did back
in 2014, which was $493 Million on a $10 million shorter budget.

Ghostbusters

Loudly hated by pretty
much everyone with internet access from the word go, Paul Feig's reimagining of
the classic and much beloved supernatural comedy featuring female leads did
managed to almost double its $144 million production budget by grossing $229
million worldwide, however, insiders say that the studios involved (Village
Roadshow, Sony Pictures,…) stand to lose something like $70 million since the
project needed to reach at the very least $300 million to break even.

Allied

The Robert Zemeckis
directed WWII spy drama starring Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard was unable to find
many allies in critics and audiences alike. The Thanksgiving release cost $85
million to produce and at the time of writing grossed just $80 million
worldwide. Adding marketing costs, the film stands to lose somewhere between
$75 million to $90 million.

The BFG

Steven Spielberg's
adaptation of Roald Dahl's book The BFG had everything going for it to be a box
office success, unfortunately, that was not the case. The $140 million project had
a major director behind it, positive reviews, and a great release date (the 4th
of July break), however, due to the heavy and costly marketing campaign,
Disney, Participant Media, and Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment have reportedly
lost between $90 million to $100 million on the film.

Gods of Egypt

Plagued with
controversy since it was announced, Alex Proyas' very white fantasy epic set in
old Egypt did managed to gross $10 million over its jaw dropping $140 million
production budget, however, taking marketing and other factors (theaters) into
account, the pricey flick is reported to have lost at least $90 million.

The Huntsman: Winter's War

Despite having a
star-heavy cast with Chris Hemsworth, Emily Blunt, Jessica Chastain, and
Charlize Theron, the sequel and spinoff to the 2012 Snow White and the Huntsman
failed to live-up to its box office expectation due to marketing costs (again).
The Huntsman: Winter's War grossed $164 million on a $115 million
production budget, and analysts say it lost north of $75 million.

The Finest Hours'

Back in March, Disney
chairman Bob Iger reported to investors that the studio had taken a $75 million
slap in the face from its historical drama starring Chris Pine, The Finest
Hours. The U.S. Coast Guard flick cost $80 million to produce and grossed a
paltry $52 million in theaters worldwide.

Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk

With Life of Pi
grossing over $600 million in theaters worldwide back in 2012, Fox was eager to
see what Ang Lee had up his sleeve for his next project. Well, what Lee had was
the drama Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk, which didn't even managed to break
even on its $40 million production budget. The high frame-rate drama didn't
have a heavy marketing campaign, however, according to insiders, since the
project is likely to do very little business on other venues (home
entertainment/TV) Billy Lynn stands to lose about $40 million or more.

Alice Through the Looking Glass

Saying Alice Through
the Looking Glass underperformed at the box office is selling its epic failure
short. The sequel to Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, which incidentally grossed over $1 billion worldwide, cost $170 million to produce and peaked at $299
million in theaters worldwide. The May release not only lost at least $70
million, but made it loud and clear that audiences are done with this world (for
now at least).

The Divergent Series: Allegiant

The Divergent
franchise is this year's unfortunate poster child for the law of diminishing
returns. The first movie, Divergent (2014), was a
small success for Lionsgate, therefore when it came time for the sequel, the studio
ramped up the production budget to the would-be successor to the then fading
The Hunger Games only to see a miniscule bump in the box office.
The affair with the YA property ended this year with Allegiant, which cost $110 million to
produce and grossed a measly $179 million in theaters worldwide, meaning
Lionsgate lost roughly $50 million after taking into consideration the marketing
campaign.
Now, the studio has
pulled the plug on any future theatrical releases and has opted to end the
franchise on television.

Rules Don't Apply

Warren Beatty's
passion project, which he spent years and years developing, bombed so hard at
the box office that it must have been hard for Beatty to explain what happened
to its sixteenth producers and financiers, which included Steven Mnuchin,
Donald Trump's pick for Treasury Secretary. In the end, hampered by not having
a worldwide release, Rules Don't Apply grossed a meager $3.6 million in the USA,
a long way away from its $25 million production budget.

Ben-Hur

Timur Bekmambetov's
biblical epic Ben-Hur was a bomb of truly biblical proportions. Costing upwards
of $110 million to produce, and a reportedly $120 to market, Ben-Hur only
managed to scrape $94 million worldwide, making it one of the biggest flops of
the year.
Sad. I only have only seen 1 of these 10 movies - "BEN-HUR". It wasn't bad but not great either. I rented it on digital and watched it on my 4K HD 60" TV. It looked good. I may rent a couple of the others one day just out of curiosity.
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