The 30 Biggest Flops In Movie History

The 30 Biggest Flops In Movie History


September 23, 2025 | Jamie Hayes

The 30 Biggest Flops In Movie History


Belly Flop

Let’s be real—pinning down the exact amount a movie tanked is like trying to catch smoke with your hands. Studios aren’t exactly eager to publish a “we lost millions” press release when things go south.

So instead, we’re leaning into the chaos: here are the biggest cinematic bellyflops ever, tallied up using the juiciest estimates and tweaked for inflation—because exaggeration makes it way more entertaining.

Flop Msn

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John Carter, Disney 2012 - Lost $250 Million

If you don't remember John Carter, well, then you're part of the problem! Disney thought John Carter was going to be the start of a big new franchise. Instead it's...well, the biggest bomb in history.

John Carter movieWalt Disney, John Carter (2012)

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The Lone Ranger, Disney, 2013 - Lost $239 Million

Gore Verbinkski's The Lone Ranger flopped before anyone had heard anything about Johnny Depp or Armie Hammer, so it can't even blame them!

The Lone Ranger movieWalt Disney, The Lone Ranger (2013)

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The 13th Warrior, Touchstone (Disney), 1999 - Lost $227 Million

Another Disney debaucle, the studio was so sure that audiences wanted to see a Muslim adventurer among Vikings that they shelled out $160 to make The 13th Warrior in 1999. Audiences did not want to see that, and the movie made it to third on our list.

The 13th Warrior (1999)Touchstone Pictures, The 13th Warrior (1999)

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Mortal Engines, Universal, 2018 - Lost $204 Million

Cities on wheels is a great pitch—but it wasn't enough to make Universal Studios' adaptation of Philip Reeve's young adult novel successful. The movie cost as much as $150 million to make and...did not make that much.

Mortal Engines (2018)Universal, Mortal Engines (2018)

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Cutthroat Island, MGM, 1995 - Lost $202 Million

Geena Davis and Matthew Modine gave it their all, but Renny Harlin’s swashbuckler sank under the weight of endless rewrites, reshoots, and recasts. We’re pointing the finger at MGM—but hey, feel free to pick your own villain.

Geena Davis in Cutthroat IslandCanal+, Cutthroat Island (1995)

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Sinbad: Legend Of The Seven Seas, Dreamworks, 2003 - Lost $199 Million

In 2003, Finding Nemo was the future—and Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas was the past. Finding Nemo made nearly a billion dollars. Sinbad nearly bankrupted Dreamworks.

Sinbad: Legend Of The Seven Seas (2003)DreamWorks, Sinbad: Legend Of The Seven Seas (2003)

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Strange World, Disney, 2022 - Lost $199 Million

Look, any movie on this list that was released between 2020 and 2022 deserves a BIG pass.

Strange World (2022)Walt Disney, Strange World (2022)

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Battleship, Universal, 2012 - Lost $191 Million

Did you know Rihanna was in Battleship? Pretty cool. Didn't get people to go see it, though.

Battleship (2012)Universal, Battleship (2012)

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Mars Needs Moms, Disney, 2011 - Lost $187 Million

It would seem that Earth did not need Mars Needs Moms.

Mars Needs Moms (2011)Walt Disney, Mars Needs Moms (2011)

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Pan, Warner Bros, 2015 - Lost $185 Million

This Peter Pan prequel tried to hook audiences with Garrett Hedlund as a dreamy young Captain Hook and Rooney Mara as Tiger Lily. Shockingly, the world wasn’t clamoring for a hot pirate origin story.

Pan (2015)Warner Bros., Pan (2015)

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Tomorrowland, Disney, 2015 - Lost $185 Million

Disney has turned theme park attractions into successful movie franchises before—but Tomorrowland was a swing and a miss.

Tomorrowland (2015)Warner Bros., Tomorrowland (2015)

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King Arthur: Legend Of The Sword, Warner Bros, 2017 - Lost $183 Million

Guy Ritchie directing a gritty, rough-and-tumble King Arthur story? Sounds great, right? Well, people in 2017 didn't think so.

Legend Of The Sword (2017)Warner Bros., King Arthur: Legend Of The Sword (2017)

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Titan A.E., 20th Century Fox, 2000 - Lost $170 Million

There used to be two big names in animation: Disney, and Don Bluth. If you don't know Don Bluth today, well...that's probably because of 

Titan A.E. (2000)20th Century, Titan A.E. (2000)

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Turning Red, Disney, 2022 - Lost $167 Million

Another 2020-2022 doomed movie, moving on. At least you can see it on streaming!

Turning Red (2022)Warner Bros., Turning Red (2022)

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Jungle Cruise, Disney, 2021 - Lost $162 Million

Sure, it technically earns the 2020–2022 pandemic pass…but I’m stamping it with a big ol’ eye roll anyway.

Jungle Cruise (2021)Walt Disney., Jungle Cruise (2021)

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Mulan, Disney, 2020 - Lost $159 Million

Oof, Disney sure had a lot of stuff coming out in 2020-2022. I wonder if they made any money in 2019...

Mulan, Disney, 2020Walt Disney, Mulan (2020)

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The Adventures of Pluto Nash, Warner Bros, 2002 - Lost $156 Million

Ahh, finally a good old-fashioned, non-pandemic related flop! Eddie Murphy was once maybe the biggest star in the world. Surely nothing with him in it could fail, right? Welp, people weren't saying that after 2002.

The Adventures of Pluto Nash (2002)Warner Bros., The Adventures of Pluto Nash (2002)

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Dark Phoenix, 20th Century Fox, 2019 - Lost $155 Million

Look, there was definitely lots of money to be made with superheroes in 2019—but Dark Phoenix wasn't it.

Dark Phoenix (2019)20th Century, Dark Phoenix (2019)

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Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, Sony, 2001 - Lost $155 Million

It took a long time before any movie studio figured out how to successfully make a video game adaptation. Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, with its PS2-era graphics was one attempt, but it didn't quite work out...

Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001)Sony, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001)

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Wonder Woman 1984, Warner Bros, 2020 - Lost $155 Million

2020, obvious pass for Wonder Woman 1984. Some of the later DC movies? Not so much of a pass.

Terminator Dark Fate, 

Wonder Woman 1984 (2020)Warner Bros., Wonder Woman 1984 (2020)

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A Wrinkle In Time, Disney, 2018 - Lost $152 Million

With Oprah headlining and a classic children’s novel as the source, Disney thought they had a guaranteed hit. Spoiler: they didn’t.

A Wrinkle In Time (2018)Walt Disney, A Wrinkle In Time (2018)

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Terminator: Dark Fate, 20th Century Fox, 2019 - Lost $152 Million

After T2, Terminator sequels have never worked—so paying almost $200 million for one in 2019 maybe wasn't the best bet.

Terminator: Dark Fate (2019)20th Century, Terminator: Dark Fate (2019)

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Monster Trucks, Paramount, 2016 - Lost $150 Million

Guys, it's monster. Trucks! The trucks...are monsters! That's the movie! Yeah, it didn't work then either. Poor Creech never stood a chance.

Monster Trucks (2016)Paramount, Monster Trucks (2016)

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Jupiter Ascending, Warner Bros, 2015 - Lost $148 Million

Yours truly is one of the world's premiere Jupiter Ascending defenders and will be taking no more questions at this time.

Jupiter Ascending (2015)Warner Bros., Jupiter Ascending (2015)

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Onward, Disney, 2020 - Lost $147 Million

Another pandemic pass. Did you know this movie stars Tom Holland and Chris Pratt? It's good, too.

Onward (2020)Walt Disney, Onward (2020)

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The Alamo, Touchstone (Disney), 2004 - Lost $146 Million

Remember The Alamo? If not, that's alright. No one went to see it.

The Alamo (2004)Touchstone, The Alamo (2004)

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Ben Hur, Paramount/MGM, 2016 - Lost $146 Million

Once upon a time, Hollywood loved a big, bloated historical epic—Ben-Hur practically defined the 1950s. These days? Not so much, thanks in no small part to the 2016 remake faceplant.

Ben Hur (2016)Paramount, Ben Hur (2016)

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Stealth, Sony, 2005 - Lost $144 Million

Hyper-advanced robot plane vs. scrappy fighter pilots? They fumbled the ball with this in 2005—someone remake this STAT!

Stealth (2005)Sony, Stealth (2005)

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Heaven's Gate, United Artists, 1980 - Lost $144 Million

After his success with The Deer Hunter, Michael Cimino wasn't going to take feedback from anyone. The result was Heaven's Gate, one of the greatest debaucles in Hollywood history. 

How bad was it? The budget ballooned to $44 million by the time it was finished. Its final gross? $3.5 million.

Heaven's Gate (1980)United Artists, Heaven's Gate (1980)

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How Do You Know, Sony, 2010 - Lost $140 Million

Back in the 80s, James L. Brooks made some of Hollywood's most beloved comedy-dramas. Did he still have the juice in 2010? Audiences say: "Nope!"

How Do You Know (2010)Sony, How Do You Know (2010)

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