Yes. A Pixar Animation Studios film flopped. “The Good Dinosaur” has the unique distinction of being the studio’s lowest-grossing movie, and, their first box office bomb. The culprit, as far as we can tell: too much cute, not enough adult humor.
Distributed by Disney and produced by Warner Bros., critics liked Pixar’s sixteenth animated film. They called it a beautiful and charming, enchanting and sweet family film. Graphics and images are realistically and gorgeously rendered making the movie a visual masterpiece according to most critics. For some reason, the crowds simply didn’t show up to the box office. Adjusted for inflation, the movie lost about $88 million. Budget estimates are $175-200 million, a heavy investment eating into its gross of $332.2 million.
Estimated loss: $85 million
Atlas Shrugged III: Who Is John Galt (2014)
Ayn Rand was the author of one of the world’s most popular books, "Atlas Shrugged." The book allegedly sold as many copies as the bible and remains one of the most successful books of all time in the United States. A three-part film series was made based on "Atlas Shrugged," mostly by conservative actors who wanted to voice support and promote her ideology and fiction.
The first and second parts were relatively well-received but suffered from a constantly changing cast and varying levels of acting and editing. The third part, however, was an absolute disaster and was universally considered as one of the worst films of all time. It bombed at the box office, losing $4.1 million, and was nominated for the Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-off, or Sequel award at the 35th Golden Raspberry Awards.
Estimated loss: $4.1 million
Fantastic Four (2015)
The "Fantastic Four" was the core of Marvel’s menu of superheroes. With the original four characters developed by legendary comic icons Jack Kirby and Stan Lee, the title dominated the vanguard popularity of the comic book series throughout the 60s and well into the 2000s. Every other Marvel superhero film has blasted the roof off the box office. So what happened?
Critics agree that it starts off pretty good. Unfortunately, they say, characters are underdeveloped, storytelling is weak, and dialogue gets downright corny at times. Twentieth Century Fox’s action-adventure, sci-fi fantasy film lost big. The production budget was $120-$125 million. Gross sales were $168 million, and it lost $83-$103 million.
Estimated loss: $80-$100 million
Dark Tide (2012)
Halle Berry has had mixed success over the years when it comes to her acting. Still, she usually manages to grab at least a moderate amount of commercial success in most of her projects. 2012's action thriller, "Dark Tide," was perhaps the first example of her charm getting pulled from under her feet.
The movie tells the story of a shark expert, played by Berry, who agrees to take a thrill-seeking millionaire and his teenage son on a dangerous shark dive due to her poor financial situation. Dark Tide made a sad $432,000 during its run at the box office against a $25 million budget, so there's a good chance that the star actress literally got paid more than the film even grossed. It was ironically summarized as a "shallow" film that's best skipped by audiences.
Estimated loss: $23.9 million
Windtalkers (2002)
Now here’s a movie that bombed so badly that MGM fired its president of worldwide marketing and distribution. It also pushed MGM's stock to nearly its four-year low point. It wasn’t all Nicolas Cage’s fault. The movie was the fourth consecutive bomb for MGM, and the president who got canned was only on the job for one year.
"Windtalkers" just wasn’t that good. Roger Ebert only gave it two measly stars lamenting, “The Navajo code talkers have waited a long time to have their story told. Too bad it appears here merely as a gimmick in an action picture.” For a movie about war, American soldiers, and the Navajo, it seemed to turn off every audience. Adjusted for inflation it lost up to $110 million, while it grossed merely $77.6 million. The production budget practically mirrored its loss tally at $115-$120 million.