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Hollywood’s Biggest Movie Flops of All Time

Hollywood’s Biggest Movie Flops of All Time

With so many movies to choose from, it’s not always easy to pick one that will be a crowd-pleaser. What one person may love, another may think was a waste of a movie ticket. Celebrity is also never a guarantee of a film’s success. Despite a star-studded cast featuring Taylor Swift and Jennifer Hudson, the big-screen adaptation of “Cats” was a box-office bomb in domestic theatres.

How a movie performs at the box office usually gets a lot of press and can influence what you watch. Oftentimes, movies that you may think about seeing that don’t do well on opening weekend become flicks that you pass on. At the same time, when a film gets great reviews before it even premieres on the silver screen, it can be hard to even get tickets. Some people were very impressed when “Avatar” became the most profitable movie in Hollywood history (and still is.)

Throughout filmdom’s history, there have been many movies that have flopped, but what is Hollywood’s biggest movie flop of all time? We’ve tried to answer this question here. Using data on worldwide box office and production costs from film industry data site The Numbers, 24/7 Tempo compiled a list of 40 movies that lost the most money when comparing their box office gross to their production budgets.

There is nothing that can guarantee a movie is going to do well at the box office. Some directors count on recognizable names in Hollywood to attract moviegoers. But the list of the biggest movie flops of all time flops includes some pretty heavy hitters – A-listers Christian Bale, Reese Witherspoon, Chris Rock, and Angelina Jolie.

Likewise, there doesn’t appear to be any one genre that is a safer bet for turning a profit. The list of the movies that lost the most money is very diverse. It includes everything from science fiction thrillers about time travel to romantic comedies and historical dramas based on true events. While the film production industry is certainly very lucrative, it is also very risky. Sometimes some movies just get lucky — here is a list of the highest-grossing movie every year since 1930.

Methodology

To determine Hollywood’s biggest movie flops of all time, 24/7 Tempo reviewed data on worldwide box office and production costs from the film industry data site The Numbers. Films were ranked on the difference between total worldwide box office gross and production budget, with the films with the largest losses ranking at the top of the list. Data on the domestic box office also came from The Numbers. Supplemental data includes the number of reviews and overall rating of each film on the Internet Movie Database as well as audience score and Tomatometer ranking from Rotten Tomatoes.

40. Virus (1999)

Source: Courtesy of Universal Pictures
  • Loss: $44,373,310
  • Production budget: $75,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $30,626,690
  • Starring: Jamie Lee Curtis, Donald Sutherland, William Baldwin
  • Directed by: John Bruno

“Virus” is a sci-fi horror film about the crew of an American tugboat fighting a dangerous alien life form aboard an abandoned Russian research vessel. Though critics were impressed with the movie’s special effects, they did not like that the film was predictable and rushed. “Your average winter cold follows a less predictable course,” wrote Lisa Schwarzbaum for Entertainment Weekly.

39. Supernova (2000)

Source: Courtesy of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corporation (MGM)
  • Loss: $45,183,506
  • Production budget: $60,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $14,816,494
  • Starring: James Spader, Peter Facinelli, Robin Tunney
  • Directed by: Walter Hill

“Supernova” follows a space hospital crew that rescues a man from another galaxy and soon finds itself in danger because of the alien artifact he smuggled aboard — all of that while trying to avoid the biggest expansion in the universe. “This is an insult to the Sci-fi genre with no excitement and bad FX,” according to Rotten Tomatoes’ Critics Consensus. Only 10% of critics and 17% of the audience had anything positive to say about the sci-fi thriller.

38. Flyboys (2006)

Source: Courtesy of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corporation (MGM)
  • Loss: $45,183,621
  • Production budget: $60,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $14,816,379
  • Starring: James Franco, Jean Reno, Jennifer Decker
  • Directed by: Tony Bill

“Flyboys” is a fictionalized take on World War I fighter pilot squadron Lafayette Escadrille. “Why make such a corny and incredibly predictable film?” asked critic Richard Roeper on Ebert and Roeper. Though critics were overall unimpressed, with just 33% of them giving the movie a positive review, 67% of audience reviewers liked “Flyboys.”

37. All the King’s Men (2006)

=Sean Penn | 7th Annual Sean Penn & Friends HAITI RISING Gala Benefiting J/P Haitian Relief Organization - Red Carpet
Source: Emma McIntyre / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

HOLLYWOOD, CA - JANUARY 06: Sean Penn attends the 7th Annual Sean Penn & Friends HAITI RISING Gala benefiting J/P Haitian Relief Organization on January 6, 2018 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images)

  • Loss: $45,478,542
  • Production budget: $55,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $9,521,458
  • Starring: Sean Penn, Jude Law, Kate Winslet
  • Directed by: Steven Zaillian

“All the King’s Men” is loosely based on the time populist politician Huey Long spent as governor of Louisiana. The movie follows the rise and fall of the corrupt politician. “All the King’s Men” is a remake of the 1949 movie, which won three Oscars, including Best Picture. According to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus, the 2006 version of the film lacks “narrative cohesiveness.”

36. Red Planet (2000)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $46,536,031
  • Production budget: $80,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $33,463,969
  • Starring: Val Kilmer, Carrie-Anne Moss, Tom Sizemore
  • Directed by: Antony Hoffman

“Red Planet” is a sci-fi movie about trying to save the human race. A group of astronauts travels to Mars to colonize the red planet because Earth is dying. Though some critics were impressed with the special effects in the movie, most agreed it lacks energy, imagination, and interesting dialogue.

35. In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale (2007)

Source: Courtesy of Freestyle Releasing
  • Loss: $46,766,780
  • Production budget: $60,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $13,233,220
  • Starring: Jason Statham, Ron Perlman, Ray Liotta
  • Directed by: Uwe Boll

“In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale” is inspired by the Dungeon Siege video game series. The movie features significant starpower, but critics were not impressed with only 4% liking the film. The Critics Consensus on Rotten Tomatoes says the movie features “mostly wooden performances, laughable dialogue, and shoddy production values.”

34. Gigli (2003)

Source: Courtesy of Columbia Pictures
  • Loss: $46,873,998
  • Production budget: $54,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $7,126,002
  • Starring: Ben Affleck, Jennifer Lopez, Justin Bartha
  • Directed by: Martin Brest

“Gigli” stars Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez — at the time one of Hollywood’s power couples — as two mobsters tasked with kidnapping and watching the brother of a district attorney. Despite their offscreen romance, the two were criticized for lacking chemistry on screen. The movie has a 6% Freshness score among Rotten Tomatoes critics. Tim Robey of The Daily Telegraph said “Gigli” is “every bit as atrocious as you may have heard. Nay, worse.”

33. Hudson Hawk (1991)

Source: Rich Fury / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images
  • Loss: $47,781,084
  • Production budget: $65,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $17,218,916
  • Starring: Bruce Willis, Danny Aiello, Andie MacDowell
  • Directed by: Michael Lehmann

“Hudson Hawk” follows a burglar recently released from jail who starts working for a wealthy couple. He is tasked with stealing art by Leonardo Da Vinci as part of a world-domination plot. “Hudson Hawk’s kitchen-sink approach to its blend of action and slapstick results in a surreal, baffling misfire,” according to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus. Fans were a little more impressed, with 56% of audiences liking the comedy compared to a 33% Tomatometer score.

32. Holy Man (1998)

Source: Courtesy of Buena Vista Pictures Distribution
  • Loss: $47,930,281
  • Production budget: $60,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $12,069,719
  • Starring: Eddie Murphy, Jeff Goldblum, Kelly Preston
  • Directed by: Stephen Herek

“Holy Man” is a comedy about a TV evangelist who starts working for a home shopping network, immediately boosting sales by making shopping a religious experience. Critics were not impressed, describing the film as unfunny, uneven, shallow, and mundane. Only 12% of critics and 24% of audiences gave the movie a positive review.

31. Lucky You (2007)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
  • Loss: $48,478,171
  • Production budget: $55,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $6,521,829
  • Starring: Eric Bana, Drew Barrymore, Robert Duvall
  • Directed by: Curtis Hanson

“Lucky You” follows a poker player who has a real chance of becoming a world champion but struggles with personal relationships, especially the one with his father. Critics describe the film as full of cliches, predictable, and slow. Only 29% of critics gave the rom-com a positive review, a slightly higher share than audience reviewers who liked the movie.

30. Beyond Borders (2003)

Source: Courtesy of Paramount Pictures
  • Loss: $48,572,910
  • Production budget: $60,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $11,427,090
  • Starring: Clive Owen, Angelina Jolie, Linus Roache
  • Directed by: Martin Campbell

“Beyond Borders” tells the story of a wealthy woman who joins a doctor in his efforts to help people in war-torn countries and the two fall in love. The biggest problem critics have with the movie is it seems to exploit real-life tragedy to tell a love story. “Important issues buried in soap opera silliness,” wrote Nell Minow of Common Sense Media. Fans had a more favorable opinion overall with 72% of audiences liking the film.

29. Outlander (2008)

Source: Courtesy of Third Rail Releasing
  • Loss: $48,749,383
  • Production budget: $50,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $1,250,617
  • Starring: Jim Caviezel, Sophia Myles, Ron Perlman
  • Directed by: Howard McCain

“Outlander” follows an alien soldier and an alien predator who crash on Earth during the Iron Age. The soldier uses Viking weaponry in his attempt to kill the predator before it destroys the planet. “Schizophrenic in subject and lackluster in execution, Outlander might have trouble finding the cult audience for which it was built,” according to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus.

28. Last Man Standing (1996)

Source: Courtesy of New Line Cinema
  • Loss: $48,884,073
  • Production budget: $67,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $18,115,927
  • Starring: Bruce Willis, Bruce Dern, William Sanderson
  • Directed by: Walter Hill

“Last Man Standing” is a crime drama set during the Prohibition era. The movie follows a hitman on a job in a small Texas town who finds himself in the middle of a war between the local Italian and Irish mafias. “Last Man Standing’ is such a desperately cheerless film, so dry and laconic and wrung out, that you wonder if the filmmakers ever thought that in any way it could be… fun,” wrote Roger Ebert for the Chicago Sun-Times.

27. Fathers’ Day (1997)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $49,318,920
  • Production budget: $85,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $35,681,080
  • Starring: Robin Williams, Billy Crystal, Julia Louis-Dreyfus
  • Directed by: Ivan Reitman

“Fathers’ Day” is a romantic comedy that follows two men, who are helping an ex-girlfriend find her missing son because either one of them can be the father. Most people probably can’t imagine either Robin Williams or Billy Crystal being unfunny, but the movie manages to do just that, according to Rotten Tomatoes’ Critics Consensus. Only 25% of critics and 26% of audiences gave “Father’s Day” a positive review.

26. The Great Raid (2005)

Source: Courtesy of Miramax Films
  • Loss: $49,402,930
  • Production budget: $60,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $10,597,070
  • Starring: Benjamin Bratt, Joseph Fiennes, James Franco
  • Directed by: John Dahl

“The Great Raid” is set in 1945, shortly before the end of World War II. A group of soldiers is sent to the Philippines on a mission to save more than 500 Americans who have been prisoners of war for about three years. Only 38% of critics gave the movie a positive review. Fans were more impressed. The war movie has a 70% positive score from audiences on Rotten Tomatoes.

25. Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return (2013)

Source: Courtesy of Clarius Entertainment
  • Loss: $49,892,067
  • Production budget: $70,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $20,107,933
  • Starring: Lea Michele, Kelsey Grammer, Dan Aykroyd
  • Directed by: Will Finn, Daniel St. Pierre

“Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return” is an animated musical fantasy based on a novel by Roger S. Baum, the great-grandson of L. Frank Baum, who wrote the Wizard of Oz books. “Legends of Oz: Dorothy’s Return” follows Dorothy as she returns to Oz after a tornado destroys her home. Critics did not like the movie, but most fans did, with 68% of audiences giving the film a positive rating.

24. Hard Rain (1998)

Source: Courtesy of Paramount Pictures
  • Loss: $50,129,433
  • Production budget: $70,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $19,870,567
  • Starring: Morgan Freeman, Christian Slater, Randy Quaid
  • Directed by: Mikael Salomon

“Hard Rain” is a heist movie that follows an armored truck driver who tries to prevent a local gang from stealing the $3 million in his truck during a storm. “Virtually nothing that takes place here is believable for a moment,” wrote Todd McCarthy of Variety. Overall, just 34% of audience reviewers and 30% of film critics liked “Hard Rain.”

23. Battlefield Earth (2000)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $50,274,337
  • Production budget: $80,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $29,725,663
  • Starring: John Travolta, Forest Whitaker, Barry Pepper
  • Directed by: Roger Christian

“Battlefield Earth,” a sci-fi action-adventure film in which Earth is a wasteland, centers on one human. The human tries to save all of humanity from the alien race of Psychols who have taken over. Only 3% of critics gave the film a positive review. According to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus, “Battlefield Earth” is “a stunningly misguided, aggressively bad sci-fi folly” that is also “ugly, campy, and poorly acted.”

22. Blackhat (2015)

Source: Courtesy of Universal Pictures
  • Loss: $50,334,996
  • Production budget: $70,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $19,665,004
  • Starring: Chris Hemsworth, Viola Davis, Tang Wei
  • Directed by: Michael Mann

“Blackhat” follows a convicted hacker who is released from prison on the condition that he helps American and Chinese authorities find a high-level cybercrime network with members all over the world. Most critics agree that the thriller has a few moments of well-developed action scenes, but they also agree it is dull and slow. Fans were even less impressed as just 24% liked “Blackhat,” compared to 32% of critics.

21. R.I.P.D. (2013)

Source: Courtesy of Universal Pictures
  • Loss: $50,923,322
  • Production budget: $130,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $79,076,678
  • Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Jeff Bridges, Mary-Louise Parker
  • Directed by: Robert Schwentke

“R.I.P.D” is a supernatural action-adventure movie about a recently murdered cop who joins the Rest In Peace Department. It consists of undead police officers charged with protecting the living from destructive souls hiding among them. The only positive reviews about the movie were about Jeff Bridges’ performance.

20. Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within (2001)

Source: Courtesy of Columbia Pictures
  • Loss: $51,868,170
  • Production budget: $137,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $85,131,830
  • Starring: Alec Baldwin, Steve Buscemi, Ming-Na Wen
  • Directed by: Hironobu Sakaguchi, Motonori Sakakibara

“Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within,” which is about a scientist on a mission to save Earth from mysterious aliens, is one of the first movies to use human characters who are actually computer-generated. Still, critics and fans were not very impressed with 44% of critics and 48% of the audience giving the fantasy film a positive review.

19. Eye See You (2002)

Source: Courtesy of DEJ Productions
  • Loss: $53,192,010
  • Production budget: $55,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $1,807,990
  • Starring: Sylvester Stallone, Charles S. Dutton, Polly Walker
  • Directed by: Jim Gillespie

“Eye See You” follows an FBI agent who is in a rehab clinic that treats law enforcement officers with PTSD. Soon after he arrives, a serial killer begins to kill patients in the facility one by one. Only 18% of movie critics had anything positive to say about the thriller, and just 28% of the audience liked it. “A guilty pleasure at best, and not worth seeing unless you want to laugh at it,” wrote Kevin N. Laforest for Apollo Guide.

18. Timeline (2003)

Source: Courtesy of Paramount Pictures
  • Loss: $53,296,816
  • Production budget: $80,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $26,703,184
  • Starring: Paul Walker, Gerard Butler, Billy Connolly
  • Directed by: Richard Donner

An archeologist travels to the past by accident and gets stuck in 14th-century France. His son and colleague then travel back to save him but get mixed up in the war between France and England at the time. “This incoherently plotted addition to the time-travel genre looks and sounds cheesy,” according to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus.

17. Lolitа (1997)

Source: Courtesy of The Samuel Goldwyn Company
  • Loss: $53,852,216
  • Production budget: $55,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $1,147,784
  • Starring: Jeremy Irons, Dominique Swain, Melanie Griffith
  • Directed by: Adrian Lyne

The film is one of several on this list with relatively favorable reviews. Based on the famous Vladimir Nabokov novel of the same name, the movie follows an English professor who falls in love with a minor and marries her mother to be close to her daughter. About 68% of movie critics and 75% of audiences liked the movie. In spite of these relatively good reviews, the taboo subject matter likely kept audiences away.

16. Lucky Numbers (2000)

Source: Evening Standard / Getty Images
  • Loss: $54,985,766
  • Production budget: $65,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $10,014,234
  • Starring: John Travolta, Lisa Kudrow, Tim Roth
  • Directed by: Nora Ephron

“Lucky Numbers” is a dark comedy about a popular TV weatherman and a TV lotto ball announcer who scam the state lottery. “The characters are generally too repulsive even for our toleration, much less our affection,” according to Cody Clark of Mr. Showbiz. The film impressed critics more than the audience, with 22% of critics giving it a positive review, compared to 19% of fans.

15. Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever (2002)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
  • Loss: $55,705,158
  • Production budget: $70,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $14,294,842
  • Starring: Antonio Banderas, Lucy Liu, Talisa Soto
  • Directed by: Wych Kaosayananda

A former FBI agent is charged with tracking down a former DIA agent. The two are after an injectable device that can kill anyone with a push of a button. Not a single critic gave the mystery/action movie a positive review. The film’s Tomatometer score is 0%, compared to a 19% audience score. “Plot holes galore, clichés, senseless violence, and an incoherent script to top it all off,” Felix Vasques Jr. wrote for Cinema Crazed.

14. Osmosis Jones (2001)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures
  • Loss: $56,403,089
  • Production budget: $70,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $13,596,911
  • Starring: Laurence Fishburne, Chris Rock, David Hyde Pierce
  • Directed by: Bobby Farrelly, Peter Farrelly

“Osmosis Jones” is a combination of a live-action and animated comedy. The film is about a white blood cell (Chris Rock) in a cop’s body (Bill Murray). The white blood cell is trying to kill off a virus (Laurence Fishburne) before the virus kills the cop. The film is one of a few on this list that received a higher rating from audiences than from critics, with 41% of viewers giving the flick a positive rating, compared to 55% of critics.

13. The Postman (1997)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $59,158,877
  • Production budget: $80,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $20,841,123
  • Starring: Kevin Costner, Will Patton, Larenz Tate
  • Directed by: Kevin Costner

Set in post-apocalyptic America, a drifter wearing a postman’s clothes delivers old mail, giving hope to survivors that the U.S. government has been restored. “The Postman’ would make for a goofy good time if it weren’t so fatally self-serious,” according to Rotten Tomatoes’ Critics Consensus. Only 8% of movie critics and 50% of audiences on Rotten Tomatoes liked the drama.

12. Soldier (1998)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $60,376,918
  • Production budget: $75,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $14,623,082
  • Starring: Kurt Russell, Jason Scott Lee, Jason Isaacs
  • Directed by: Paul W.S. Anderson

The movie centers on a highly skilled soldier who is dumped on a waste planet after being deemed obsolete. There he joins a group of colonists who try to stop the launch of a group of genetically engineered killers. Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus describes the action movie as a “waste of a good set.”

11. Stealth (2005)

Source: Courtesy of Columbia Pictures
  • Loss: $61,583,254
  • Production budget: $138,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $76,416,746
  • Starring: Josh Lucas, Jessica Biel, Jamie Foxx
  • Directed by: Rob Cohen

Three Navy fighter pilots are involved in a top-secret mission to prepare an unmanned aircraft to hit foreign targets. One of the pilots doesn’t trust the artificial intelligence technology and tries to stop it before it leads to a world war. Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus describes the movie as “loud, preposterous, and predictable.”

10. The 13th Warrior (1999)

Source: Courtesy of Buena Vista Pictures Distribution
  • Loss: $63,301,101
  • Production budget: $125,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $61,698,899
  • Starring: Antonio Banderas, Diane Venora, Dennis Storhøi
  • Directed by: John McTiernan, Michael Crichton

“The 13th Warrior” follows a Muslim ambassador who is banned from his homeland. He joins the Vikings in their fight against an evil threat to their land. Though critics were mostly impressed with the movie’s visual effects, they were overwhelmingly disappointed in the plot. Audiences appeared to be more forgiving, with 66% of them liking it.

9. The Alamo (2004)

Source: Courtesy of Buena Vista Pictures Distribution
  • Loss: $68,088,638
  • Production budget: $92,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $23,911,362
  • Starring: Dennis Quaid, Billy Bob Thornton, Emilio Echevarría
  • Directed by: John Lee Hancock

“The Alamo” is a historical war drama about the last stand of Sam Houston, Davy Crockett, and other historical figures against the Mexican army, led by General Santa Ana. About 29% of movie critics and 45% of audiences gave the film a positive review. According to the Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus, “The Alamo” was “too conventional and uninvolving to be memorable.”

8. Monkeybone (2001)

Source: Courtesy of Twentieth Century Fox
  • Loss: $69,590,483
  • Production budget: $75,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $5,409,517
  • Starring: Brendan Fraser, Bridget Fonda, John Turturro
  • Directed by: Henry Selick

“Monkeybone” follows cartoonist Stu Miley who falls into a coma and gets trapped in the world he made up. To find his way back to reality, he needs to fight his own creation — Monkeybone. According to Rotten Tomatoes’ Critics Consensus, the film is “too shapeless a movie, with unengaging characters and random situations that fail to build up laughs.”

7. How Do You Know (2010)

Source: Courtesy of Columbia Pictures
  • Loss: $70,371,823
  • Production budget: $120,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $49,628,177
  • Starring: Reese Witherspoon, Paul Rudd, Owen Wilson
  • Directed by: James L. Brooks

“How Do You Know” centers on a softball player who, at 31 years old, is deemed too old and is cut from her team. In the process of evaluating her life, she finds herself in a love triangle with a professional baseball player and businessman from New York. “How Do You Know” is Jack Nicholson’s last movie before he retired from the industry.

6. Cutthroat Island (1995)

Source: Courtesy of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
  • Loss: $73,482,678
  • Production budget: $92,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $18,517,322
  • Starring: Geena Davis, Matthew Modine, Frank Langella
  • Directed by: Renny Harlin

“Cutthroat Island” tells the story of a feisty female pirate on a journey to find a buried treasure. Critics and audiences alike disliked the movies. Only 38% and 40%, respectively, gave the adventure flick a positive review. “It takes a two-hour act of will to keep facing the screen during this moribund movie,” according to Desson Thomson of the Washington Post.

5. A Sound of Thunder (2005)

Source: Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $73,699,549
  • Production budget: $80,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $6,300,451
  • Starring: Edward Burns, Ben Kingsley, Catherine McCormack
  • Directed by: Peter Hyams

“A Sound of Thunder ” is an action-adventure movie about time travel. Millionaires from the future can travel back to prehistoric times to hunt dinosaurs, but one of them makes a serious mistake that results in devastating and unforeseen consequences. Critics really did not like the movie, and few audience reviewers did as well. “Choppy logic and uneven performances are overshadowed by not-so-special effects that make the suspension of disbelief a nearly impossible task,” according to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus.

4. The Promise (2016)

Source: Courtesy of Open Road Films (II)
  • Loss: $79,448,583
  • Production budget: $90,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $10,551,417
  • Starring: Oscar Isaac, Charlotte Le Bon, Christian Bale
  • Directed by: Terry George

Set in the early 20th century during the last years of the Ottoman Empire, “The Promise” is a romantic drama about a love triangle involving a medical student, a dance instructor, and an American photojournalist. Though the movie was not a box office hit by any means, 92% of audiences on Rotten Tomatoes liked the film.

3. The Adventures of Pluto Nash (2002)

Source: Courtesy of Warner Bros.
  • Loss: $92,905,005
  • Production budget: $100,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $7,094,995
  • Starring: Eddie Murphy, Jay Mohr, Randy Quaid
  • Directed by: Ron Underwood

“The Adventures of Pluto Nash” is a sci-fi action comedy about a man living on the Moon in 2087. He struggles to keep his nightclub out of the hands of the mafia, who have their sights set on conquering the Moon. Only 4% of critics gave the action comedy a positive review, compared to 15% of audience reviewers.

2. Town & Country (2001)

Source: Christopher Polk / Getty Images
  • Loss: $94,635,231
  • Production budget: $105,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $10,364,769
  • Starring: Warren Beatty, Diane Keaton, Nastassja Kinski
  • Directed by: Peter Chelsom

“Town & Country” is a romantic comedy about two couples, their marriages, and their relationships with each other. The film “feels confusingly choppy,” according to Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus. The rom-com is one of few on this list that was disliked by fans as much as critics. The movie’s Tomatometer score is only 13% and only 14% of audiences liked it. Following the release of “Town & Country,” Warren Beatty did not star in another motion picture for 15 years.

1. Mars Needs Moms (2011)

Source: Courtesy of Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
  • Loss: $110,450,242
  • Production budget: $150,000,000
  • Worldwide box office: $39,549,758
  • Starring: Seth Green, Joan Cusack, Dan Fogler
  • Directed by: Simon Wells

A 9-year-old boy is trying to save his mother from Martians who kidnap her and gains a new appreciation for her during his rescue journey. Some critics have described the movie as a mess and an interplanetary clunker.

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