List of abandoned and unfinished films
Updated: 5/20/2026, 8:14:19 PM Wikipedia source
Films may not be completed for several reasons, with some being shelved during different stages of the production. Some films have been shut down days into production. Other unfinished films have been shot in their entirety but have not completed post-production where the film is edited and sound and score added. Unfinished films are distinguished from unreleased films which are finished but have not yet been released and shown in theatres or released on DVD. In some instances these films cannot be shown for legal reasons. Withdrawn films are similar except they did have brief showings but cannot be shown again, also usually for legal reasons. According to the Film Yearbook, "history has shown that the unfinished film is with few exceptions designed to remain that way." Exceptions do exist: these include Gulliver's Travels and The Jigsaw Man, both of which shut down when they ran out of funds but after a year or more found new financing and were able to finish shooting.
Tables
| Year production was to begin | Film | Director | Screenwriter | Producer | Cast | Notes | References |
| 1939 | Iwonka | Konrad Tom | Konrad Tom | Albert Wywerka | Elżbieta Barszczewska, Igo Sym, Jerzy Kaliszewski, Wiktor Biegański, Stanisław Grolicki, Stefan Hnydziński | A drama film based on the novel by Juliusz German, production of which was planned to begin in 1940. Work on the film was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland, which began World War II. | |
| 1939 | Kwiaciarka | Konrad Tom | B. Jotkan | Barbara Kostrzewska, Jerzy Pichelski, Igo Sym | A feature film with elements of a musical, production of which was planned to begin in 1940. Work on the film was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland, which began World War II. | ||
| 1954 | Finian's Rainbow | John Hubley | Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Oscar Peterson, Louis Armstrong, Barry Fitzgerald, Jim Backus, David Burns, David Wayne, Ella Logan | An animated film based on the Broadway play of the same title. The film ran into difficulty due to Hubley and Harburg's refusal to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities as a result of which work on the film was abandoned. | |||
| 1966–1975 | The Freak | Charlie Chaplin | Victoria Chaplin | The Freak was a dramatic comedy from Charles Chaplin. The story revolved around a young South American girl who unexpectedly sprouts a pair of wings. She is kidnapped and taken to London, where her captors cash in by passing her off as an angel. Later she escapes, only to be arrested because of her appearance. She is further dehumanized by standing | |||
| 1966–1968 | Nasz Człowiek w Warszawie | Stanisław Bareja, Jacek Fedorowicz | Zespół Filmowy Rytm | Bohdan Łazuka | In 1966, Stanisław Bareja and Jacek Fedorowicz, inspired by James Bond films, began working on a script for a spy film about an atomic bomb dropped into the Zegrze Reservoir. Meanwhile, American agents arrived in Warsaw. The script was completed in 1967, and the film was to be produced by the Zespół Filmowy Rytm. Due to political reorganization and | ||
| 1966–1999 | Przedwiośnie | Andrzej Wajda | Andrzej Wajda | As early as 1956, director Andrzej Wajda planned to create a film adaptation of Stefan Żeromski's The Spring to Come, intended to stimulate discussion about the identity of the Polish nation. Several script versions were created in 1966, 1978, 1991, 1997, and 1999. However, the first version of the 1966 script was not released due to censorship, an | |||
| c. 1967 | Frenzy (a . Kaleidoscope) | Alfred Hitchcock | Benn Levy | Alfred Hitchcock | Considerable test footage was shot. Not to be confused with Hitchcock's 1972 film Frenzy. | ||
| 1968–1970 | Napoleon | Stanley Kubrick | Stanley Kubrick | Jack Nicholson | Kubrick's film about Napoleon was well into preproduction and ready to begin filming in 1970 when MGM cancelled the project. Numerous reasons have been cited for the abandonment of the project, including its projected cost and a change of ownership at MGM. | ||
| 1970 | The Dancer | Tony Richardson | Edward Albee | Harry Saltzman | Rudolf Nureyev as Nijinsky, Claude Jade as Romola and Paul Scofield as Diaghilev | Producer Harry Saltzman canceled the project during pre-production several weeks before shooting was to begin. Saltzman claimed Albee's script was amateurish. Tony Richardson believes Saltzman used this as a pretext to avoid making the film. According to Richardson, Saltzman had overextended himself and did not have the funds to make the film. Salt | |
| 1972 | The Streets of Laredo | Peter Bogdanovich | Larry McMurtry, Peter Bogdanovich | Peter Bogdanovich | John Wayne, James Stewart, Henry Fonda, Ryan O'Neal, Cybill Shepherd, Ben Johnson, Cloris Leachman, Ellen Burstyn, The Clancy Brothers | After directing What's Up, Doc?, Peter Bogdanovich landed a three-picture deal at Warner Bros., the first of which was to be Western called The Streets of Laredo, set just after the American Civil War. Bogdanovich envisioned the film as a "summation of the Western", assembling an all-star cast of iconic Western stars which included primarily John W | |
| 1973–1978 | The Many Faces of Jesus | Jens Jørgen Thorsen | Jens Jørgen Thorsen | Various, including David Grant | A pornographic film depicting Jesus engaged in sex acts with men and women. The premise caused controversy in every country where production was attempted. The effort was condemned by both Pope Paul VI and Queen Elizabeth II. After failing to secure funding in multiple countries, bans on production in at least two, and a personal ban from entering | ||
| 1973–1997 | The Prometheus Crisis/Meltdown | John Dahl (1994) | John Carpenter from the novel by Frank M. Robinson and Thomas N. Scortia | Peter Bart and Max Palevsky (1970s) | Dolph Lundgren (1994) Casper Van Dien (1997) | Originally planned as a disaster film about a meltdown at a newly built nuclear power station based on a novel by two of the authors responsible for The Towering Inferno for release by Paramount. John Carpenter's script, retitled Meltdown, was a straight horror film he described as "kind of Halloween in a nuclear power plant." Carpenter's script ca | |
| 1973–1986 | The Yellow Jersey | Michael Cimino (1975–1984) Jerry Schatzberg (1986) | Colin Welland, Carl Foreman, Lawrence Konner | Gary Mehlman, Carl Foreman | Dustin Hoffman (1983–1986) Christopher Lambert (1986) | The rights to Ralph Hurne's novel The Yellow Jersey were optioned in 1973 by producer Gary Mehlman, who then made a development deal with Columbia Pictures. The novel, set during the Tour de France, followed an aging professional cyclist who nearly wins the race. By 1975, Mehlman broad aboard Michael Cimino to direct the film. Over the next several | |
| 1974–1976 | Dune | Alejandro Jodorowsky | Alejandro Jodorowsky | Michel Seydoux | David Carradine, Geraldine Chaplin, Orson Welles, Salvador Dalí, Amanda Lear, Gloria Swanson, Mick Jagger, Brontis Jodorowsky | Jodorowsky spent two years developing a film version of Frank Herbert's novel Dune. Actors approached or cast in the film include David Carradine as Leto Atreides, Geraldine Chaplin as Lady Jessica, Orson Welles as Vladimir Harkonnen, Salvador Dalí as Emperor Shaddam IV, Amanda Lear as Princess Irulan, Gloria Swanson as Gaius Helen Mohiam, Mick Ja | |
| 1974–2004 | Houdini | James Bridges (1974) Robert Zemeckis (1992) Paul Verhoeven (1997–1998) | Anthony Burgess, Carol Sobieski, William Goodhart, William Hjortsberg, Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman, Stephen J. Rivele and Christopher Wilkinson | Ray Stark | James Caan (1974) Tom Cruise (1992–1998) | Ray Stark desired to produce a biopic film centered on Harry Houdini's life and career, with Columbia Pictures being attached to distribute, but the project was stalled in development limbo for thirty years. Initially, Stark planned to co-produce with John Houseman, with James Bridges hired to direct, Anthony Burgess hired to write the screenplay, | |
| 1975 | Perfect Strangers | Michael Cimino | Michael Cimino | David V. Picker | Roy Scheider, Romy Schneider, Oskar Werner | In 1975, Perfect Strangers entered the early stages of pre-production at Paramount Pictures with a cast composed of Roy Scheider, Romy Schneider and Oskar Werner, and Michael Cimino aboard to helm the film based on his original screenplay. The project was described as a political love story that bore "some resemblance to Casablanca, involving the r | |
| 1975–1978 | The Micronauts | Don Sharp, Richard Loncraine and others | John Gay, Gordon Williams and others | Harry Saltzman | Gregory Peck, Lee Remick, James Mason, Honor Blackman, Stacy Keach | Adaptation of novel Cold War in a Country Garden. Some test and special effects footage was shot. Principal photography did not begin. No scenes with the leads were shot. | |
| 1975–1996 | Osioł grający na lirze | Wojciech Has | Jadwiga Kukułczanka | Based on a script by Jadwiga Kukułczana written in 1975, Wojciech Has planned to direct a Polish-French co-production. On December 12, 1981, he was scheduled to fly to Paris, but the director missed his flight, and because martial law in Poland imposed travel restrictions the following day, filming was impossible. Wojciech Has continued to return, | |||
| 1976–1979 | Warhead (a . James Bond of the Secret Service) | Len Deighton, Sean Connery, Kevin McClory | Kevin McClory for Paramount Pictures | Sean Connery (reportedly being paid US$5M) | Financing and legal troubles doomed the project. McClory eventually licensed his rights to Jack Schwartzman who made Never Say Never Again, which has an entirely different screenplay. McClory continued his attempts to produce versions of Warhead into the 2000s. | ||
| 1977–1987 | Ronnie Rocket | David Lynch | David Lynch | Stuart Cornfeld | Dexter Fletcher (1980) Michael J. Anderson (1987) | After releasing 1977's Eraserhead, David Lynch began work on the screenplay for Ronnie Rocket, also subtitled The Absurd Mystery of the Strange Forces of Existence. Lynch described the film as being "about electricity and a three-foot guy with red hair". He and his agent Marty Michaelson initially attempted to find financial backing for the project | |
| 1979 | The First Day (Russian: Первый День Pervyj Dyen) | Andrei Tarkovsky | Based on a script by Andrei Konchalovsky | Goskino USSR | Natalya Bondarchuk and Anatoli Papanov | The film was set in 18th-century Russia during the reign of Tsar Peter the Great. As the film was critical of the USSR's state atheism, Tarkovsky submitted a different script to Goskino USSR than the one he actually filmed, with several extra scenes criticizing state atheism. After shooting about half of the film, this was discovered by censors and | |
| 1979 or 1980 | The Lawbreakers | David Lean | Robert Bolt (based on Richard Hough's novel Captain Bligh and Mr. Christian) | Phil Kellogg, Bernard Williams | Christopher Reeve, Anthony Hopkins, Hugh Grant | David Lean and Robert Bolt began working on a script in October 1977, planning to adapt the source novel into two films; The Lawbreakers and The Long Arm. In November 1977, Dino De Laurentiis announced he would finance the project, and in December Paramount Pictures signed on to distribute. The intention was to shoot the film in Tahiti, where De La | |
| The Long Arm | |||||||
| 1979 or 1980 | The Short Night | Alfred Hitchcock | David Freeman from Ronald Kirkbride's novel | Alfred Hitchcock for Universal Studios | Project cancelled due to Hitchcock's advanced years and ill-health. | ||
| 1979–1995 | On the Road | Francis Ford Coppola | Francis Ford Coppola, Roman Coppola (based on the Jack Kerouac novel of the same name | Ethan Hawke, Brad Pitt | Francis Ford Coppola bought the screen rights to On the Road in 1979. Over the years, he hired several screenwriters to adapt the book into a film, including Michael Herr and Barry Gifford, only for Coppola to write his own draft with his son, Roman. In 1995, Coppola planned to shoot on black-and-white 16 mm film and held auditions with poet Allen | ||
| 1979–1986 | The Works | Lance Williams | Lance Williams | Alexander Schure | An animated feature about robots, it would have been the world's first computer animated movie had it been made. But because of technical limitations in computer power and tools back in the 70s and early 80s, the movie never went into actual production. | ||
| Mid-to-late 1980s | Flamingos Forever | John Waters | John Waters | John Waters for New Line Cinema | Divine, Mary Vivian Pearce, Edith Massey, Mink Stole, Jean Hill | The unfilmed sequel to Pink Flamingos would have taken place 15 years after the events of the first movie. Troma Entertainment offered to finance the film at $600,000. However, the film was cancelled because Divine wanted to focus on more serious, male roles and Edith Massey died in 1984. Waters did not feel comfortable with Troma's post-editing fa | |
| 1980–1981 | Night Skies | Tobe Hooper | John Sayles | Steven Spielberg | In the late 1970s, Columbia Pictures was interested in making a sequel to Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Spielberg wasn't interested in a sequel, but he didn't want the film made without him. He decided to write a science fiction horror film based on an with Kelly–Hopkinsville encounter, which told the story of extraterrestrial scientists stud | ||
| 1981–1983 | Sea Trial | William Friedkin | Based on Frank De Felitta's novel | William Friedkin, Peter Guber, Jon Peters | Michael Nouri, Laura Branigan | Principal photography was announced to begin in the summer of 1983, though Fox ultimately cancelled the production. | |
| 1984–1991 | Gale Force | Renny Harlin | David Chappe | Daniel Melnick | Sylvester Stallone | The story is set in a small coastal community in South Carolina, where an ex-Navy SEAL returns from prison, but is unwelcome. He then has to fight a group of modern pirates who invade the community while it is being struck by a major hurricane. David Chappe first wrote a spec script for Gale Force in 1984, but after serving as a reader and editor i | |
| 1986 | Paradise Road | Peter Bogdanovich | David Scott Milton, Peter Bogdanovich (from the novel of the same name) | Peter Bogdanovich | Frank Sinatra, James Stewart, Lee Marvin, Charles Aznavour, Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Sophia Loren, John Ritter | In the late '80s, Peter Bogdanovich almost led an all-star cast for a comedy-drama set in Las Vegas called Paradise Road about degenerate gamblers who lose their casino in a poker game. However, the film was not made, due to the meddling of Sinatra's lawyers, as claimed by Bogdanovich. | |
| 1987 | Blest Souls | Michael Cimino | Eoghan Harris, Robert Bolt, Michael Cimino | Barry Spikings, Michael Cimino, Joann Carelli | Sean Bean, Tilda Swinton | Michael Cimino planned to make a film about 1920s Irish leader Michael Collins, going as far as going to County Kerry, Ireland to scout locations. The script was written by Eoghan Harris, but it was really a complete revision and rewriting of the script by Robert Bolt that Cimino worked from. Columbia Pictures was eager to do it, but then-parent Co | |
| 1987–1995 | Isobar/The Train | Roland Emmerich, Ridley Scott | Dean Devlin, Steven E. de Souza, Jim Uhls | H. R. Giger, Joel Silver, Norris Spencer | Kim Basinger, Michael Jeter, Sylvester Stallone | The original concept for The Train envisioned a sci-fi horror film set in the near future, where the streets of Los Angeles are paralyzed by massive traffic jams. The alternative was a high-speed subway train that accidentally unleashes a genetically modified creature with a brain in the form of a hard drive, intended to be used for an artificial i | |
| 1987 or 1988 | Winchell | Bob Fosse | Michael Herr | Robert Benton | Robert De Niro | Fosse started to work on the biographical film based on the American newspaper gossip columnist Walter Winchell with Robert De Niro starring as Winchell. Before he could even start the picture, Fosse died. | |
| 1988–1995 | Spider-Man | James Cameron | James Cameron | James Cameron, Menahem Golan | Leonardo DiCaprio | In 1988, Carolco Pictures acquired the film rights to the Marvel comics superhero for $5 million, and they were mandated to credit Menahem Golan as an executive producer. A few years later, James Cameron was attached to direct the film, and he wrote his own scriptment that deconstructed Spider-Man's origin story in a gritty and realistic environmen | |
| Late 1980s | Leningrad: The 900 Days | Sergio Leone | Based on Harrison Salisbury's non-fiction The 900 Days: The Siege Of Leningrad | Sergio Leone | Robert De Niro | After Once Upon a Time in America, Sergio Leone spent the remainder of his life preparing to produce and direct an epic war film set during the Siege of Leningrad with Robert De Niro playing an American journalist inside the city. Having raised $100 million in funding and discussed location filming with the Soviet government, Leone died of a heart | |
| Late 1980s | Oil and Vinegar | Howard Deutch | John Hughes | Molly Ringwald, Matthew Broderick | After he finished writing the script for Pretty in Pink, Hughes wrote the script of a film titled Oil and Vinegar, which was to star Matthew Broderick and Molly Ringwald as a couple who "spend a day in a motel room, swapping stories on life and love". According to Broderick, "It was very intimate: it was just the two of them, basically, is my memo | ||
| 1989–2000 | Ocean of Storms | Martin Scorsese | Ben Young Mason, Tony Bill, Wesley Strick, Robert Towne, Lawrence Wright, Stephen Harrigan, Aaron Sorkin | Warren Beatty | Warren Beatty | The film's story, originally written by Ben Young Mason and Tony Bill, was to focus on an aging astronaut who emerges from retirement and rejoins the space program to relive his past life, and he falls in love with a female astronaut along the way. Warren Beatty acquired the Ocean of Storms screenplay with the desire to produce and star in the proj | |
| 1990–1997 | Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian | Jonathan Gems | The film was in development in 1990, with a script by Jonathan Gems. It was supposed to tell the story of the Deetz family moving to Hawaii to build a resort, which turned out to be built on the site of a former cemetery. Beetlejuice was supposed to get involved, accidentally awakening a ghost and causing chaos. Due to an unsatisfactory story idea | ||||
| 1990–2005 | The Magic 7 | Roger Holzberg | Roger Holzberg | Roger Holzberg John Kilkenny Ron Layton | John Candy, Michael J. Fox, Jeremy Irons, James Earl Jones, Ice-T, Dirk Benedict, Madeline Kahn | A fantastic animated film with an all-star cast, it was originally scheduled to premiere on Earth Day, April 22, 1997, before being pushed back to 2005. The deaths of several key actors and financial difficulties led to the film being shelved. | |
| 1991 | Night Ride Down | Harold Becker | Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz | Harrison Ford | Set during a Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters strike in the 1930s, Harrison Ford was cast to portray a Pullman Sleeping Car Company executive and lawyer whose daughter is kidnapped to discredit the union. Ford described the project as "a running, jumping and falling down movie, on trains", an action-adventure trope he had similarly experienced i | ||
| 1991 | Nostromo | David Lean | David Lean, Maggie Unsworth (from the Joseph Conrad novel of the same name) | Serge Silberman | Georges Corraface, Marlon Brando, Paul Scofield, Peter O'Toole, Isabella Rossellini, Christopher Lambert, Dennis Quaid | During the last years of his life, David Lean was in pre-production of a film version of Joseph Conrad's Nostromo. Steven Spielberg was initially attached to produce the project, with the backing of Warner Bros., but after several rewrites and disagreements on the script, he left the project and was replaced by Serge Silberman. Several writers circ | |
| 1993–1994 | Crusade | Paul Verhoeven | Walon Green | Arnold Schwarzenegger, John Turturro, Robert Duvall, Gary Sinise, Charlton Heston, Jennifer Connelly | Set during the Crusades in the late 11th century, the historical epic film was to focus on a thief named Hagen, who after faking a miracle, became a high-profile figure during the battles. Arnold Schwarzenegger first expressed interest in starring in a Crusades-based film during production of Total Recall. Paul Verhoeven, in turn, hired Walon Green | ||
| 1995–1998 | The Incredible Hulk | Joe Johnston (1997) Jonathan Hensleigh (1997–1998) | Jonathan Hensleigh, John Turman, Zak Penn, J. J. Abrams, Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski | Jonathan Hensleigh, Gale Anne Hurd, Avi Arad | A film based on the Marvel Comics character had been in development at Universal Pictures since 1990, and in 1995, Jonathan Hensleigh became attached to co-produce via his wife Gale Anne Hurd. In April 1997, Hensleigh was tasked to rewrite the script, as Joe Johnston was hired to direct. In July 1997, Johnston backed out to direct October Sky, and | ||
| 1995–1998 | I Am Legend | Ridley Scott | Mark Protosevich, John Logan, Neal Jimenez, Ridley Scott (based on the novel of the same name by Richard Matheson) | Neal H. Moritz | Arnold Schwarzenegger | In 1995, Warner Bros. began development on a film adaptation of Richard Matheson's post-apocalyptic novel, and Mark Protosevich was hired to write the screenplay. By June 1997, Ridley Scott was hired to direct, but since the latter was promised creative liberties, John Logan was tasked to rewrite the script. Scott and Logan's psychological-thriller | |
| 1996 | The Double | Roman Polanski | Jeremy Leven (from the Fyodor Dostoevsky novel of the same name) | Lili Fini Zanuck, Todd Black | John Travolta, Isabelle Adjani, John Goodman, Jean Reno | Travolta reportedly stormed out of rehearsals thereby shutting down pre-production. Shooting to have begun in May 1996. Travolta was being paid US$17M. Robert Richardon was signed to photograph the film and Pierre Guffroy design the sets. | |
| 1996 | Seksmisja 3, czyli graniasta cytryna | Juliusz Machulski | Juliusz Machulski, Ryszard Zatorski | The script for the film was written in 1996, but production was abandoned due to high costs and the ongoing production of the films Kiler and Kiler-ów 2-óch. Ultimately, the script was turned into a book. | |||
| 1996–1998 | Superman Lives | Tim Burton | Kevin Smith, Wesley Strick, Dan Gilroy | Jon Peters | Nicolas Cage | A film based on DC Comics superhero Superman was developed by Warner Bros. for two years, with Burton directing. Smith, Strick and Gilroy wrote scripts; Cage was hired to play Superman. Filming was scheduled to begin in early 1998 but was repeatedly pushed back. The studio had spent $30 million on the film by the time it was cancelled in 1998. The | |
| 1997–1998 | The Age of Aquarius | Phil Alden Robinson | Phil Alden Robinson | Harrison Ford, Kristin Scott Thomas | Set throughout the Middle East in 1984, the war-romance film would have focused on a mercenary who delivers food and weapons to war-devastated countries for profit. Along the way, he falls in love with an estranged Bosnian woman and later rescues her from the war-ravaged Sarajevo. Harrison Ford agreed to take on the leading role for $20 million, an |
| Year of production | Film | Director | Screenwriter | Producer | Cast | Notes | Ref |
| 1913 | Obrona Częstochowy | Edward Puchalski | Wytwórnia filmowa Sokół | The film is based on the novel Deluge by Henryk Sienkiewicz about the Swedish Deluge. Work was halted when the creators did not receive permission from the Russian authorities for the army to participate in outdoor filming. The scenes recorded for the film were later used to produce The Deluge, which premiered in 1915. | |||
| 1919 | The Professor | Charlie Chaplin | Charlie Chaplin | Charles D. Hall | Albert Austin, Henry Bergman, Charlie Chaplin, Loyal Underwood, Tom Wilson | ||
| 1920–1925 | The Throwback | Arthur Shirley | Pat O'Cotter | Ernest Higgins, Arthur Shirley | |||
| 1922 | Number 13 (a . Mrs. Peabody) | Alfred Hitchcock | Anita Ross | Alfred Hitchcock for Gainsborough Pictures | Clare Greet, Ernest Thesiger | Production stopped when funding ran out. | |
| 1930–1934 | Great Day | Harry Beaumont, Harry A. Pollard | Joan Crawford, Johnny Mack Brown, John Miljan, Anita Page, Marjorie Rambeau, John Charles Thomas | ||||
| 1931 | Creation | Willis H. O'Brien | Story by Edgar Rice Burroughs | Merian C. Cooper, David O. Selznick | Ralf Harolde | ||
| 1935–1937 | Bezhin Meadow | Sergei Eisenstein | Isaak Babel, Sergei M. Eisenstein, Aleksandr Rzheshevsky, based on a story by Ivan Turgenev | V. Ya. Babitsky | Vitya Kartashov, Nikolai Khmelyov, Pavel Ardzhanov, Yekaterina Teleshova, Erast Garin, Nikolai Maslov, Boris Zakhava | A Soviet propaganda film based on the story of the Pavlik Morozov. | |
| 1935–1936 | Le avventure di Pinocchio | Raoul Verdini, Umberto Spano | Carlo Bachini Mario Pompei Amerigo Tot CAIR | An animated film based on the novel The Adventures of Pinocchio, commissioned by Alfredo Rocco to create the first Italian animated film. The film was never completed due to technical and financial problems, which led to the closure of the CAIR (Cartoni Animati Italiani Roma) studio. | |||
| 1936 | I Loved a Soldier / Invitation to Happiness | Henry Hathaway | Lajos Bíró, John van Druten, Grover Jones, Melchior Lengyel, Alice De Soos | Benjamin Glazer, Ernst Lubitsch | Charles Boyer, Walter Catlett, Marlene Dietrich, Margaret Sullavan, Lionel Stander | ||
| 1937 | I, Claudius | Josef von Sternberg | Alexander Korda | Charles Laughton, Emlyn Williams and Merle Oberon | Production was dogged by ill-luck. A car accident involving Oberon caused filming to be abandoned. | ||
| 1939 | Hania | Józef Lejtes | Bogdan Pepłowski Stanisław Urbanowicz | Jadwiga Kuryluk | After completing filming on Inżynier Szeruda, director Józef Lejtes began work on Hania, an adaptation of Henryk Sienkiewicz's novella of the same name whose story was to be set during the January Uprising, based on other stories by Henryk Sienkiewicz. Initially, the film faced a serious problem due to the lack of actors, but after the selection of | ||
| 1939 | Legion Condor | Karl Ritter | Felix Lützkendorf, Karl Ritter | UFA | Paul Hartmann, Albert Hehn, Fritz Kampers | Anti-communist war film about the Condor Legion fighting in the Spanish Civil War. Production was halted in late August 1939 for political reasons following the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact so as not to offend the Soviets. | |
| 1939 | Przybyli do wsi żołnierze | Romuald Gantkowski | Wiktor Budzyński, kpt. Jerzy Ciepielowski | Kohort | Józef Kondrat, Tadeusz Fijewski, Nina Świerczewska | A comedy film whose production was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland starting World War II. | |
| 1939 | Przygody pana Piorunkiewicza | Eugeniusz Cękalski | Stanisław Dygat, Eugeniusz Cękalski | Jan Kurnakowicz, Władysław Grabowski | A feature comedy intended for Polish Telegraphic Agency to promote achievements Second Polish Republic. Unfinished due to the German invasion of Poland starting World War II. | ||
| 1939 | Straszny Dziadunio | Michał Wyszyński | Romana Czaplicka | Based on Maria Rodziewiczówna's novel of the same name, filming began at the turn of May and June 1939, but work on the film was suspended in August for unknown reasons and never resumed. | |||
| 1939 | Szczęście przychodzi, kiedy chce | Mieczysław Krawicz | Anatol Stern | Libkow-Film | Lidia Wysocka Kazimierz Junosza-Stępowski Zofia Lindorf | A film of unknown content, scheduled for release in October 1939. The film was not completed due to by the German invasion of Poland starting World War II. | |
| 1939 | Uwaga! Szpieg | Eugeniusz Bodo | Napoleon Sądek, Stanisław Belski | Rex-Film | Eugeniusz Bodo, Helena Grossówna | The production was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland starting World War II. | |
| 1942 | It's All True | Orson Welles | Orson Welles, John Fante, Norman Foster, Robert Meltzer | Orson Welles | Ensemble | RKO cancelled the project after Welles had filmed for over five months. The project was the basis of the documentary It's All True: Based on an Unfinished Film by Orson Welles. | |
| 1943 | Sogno d'amore | Ferdinando Maria Poggioli | Sergio Amidei, Ferdinando Maria Poggioli | Vitalba | Miriam di San Servolo | A romantic film, the work on which was interrupted due to Mussolini's removal from power and the war situation related to the ongoing Italian campaign. | |
| 1962 | Something's Got to Give | George Cukor | Nunnally Johnson, Walter Bernstein | Henry T. Weinstein | Marilyn Monroe, Dean Martin | This was a remake of My Favorite Wife (1940). The film had shot for over a month when Monroe was fired. She was later rehired, but died before filming could resume. After her death, a different version of the film was made as Move Over, Darling (1963). | |
| 1966-1969 | Death, Where is Thy Sting-a-ling-ling? | David Miller | Walter Mirisch | Roald Dahl | Gregory Peck, Ian McKellen, Maria Grazia Buccella | Filming started in Switzerland in 1966 but was held up through poor weather. Eventually head of UA David Picker abandoned the project. | |
| 1967 | Monsieur LeCoq | Seth Holt | Ian McLellan Hunter, Zero Mostel | Adrian Scott | Zero Mostel, Julie Newmar, Akim Tamiroff, Ronnie Corbett | Officially abandoned due to "poor weather conditions" | |
| 1971 | A Glimpse of Tiger | Anthony Harvey | Jack Brodsky, Elliott Gould | Elliott Gould, Kim Darby | Based on Herman Raucher's novel of the same title. Warner Bros. shut down the film being shot in New York City on Friday 6 March 1971. A germ of the idea was ultimately reworked into What's Up, Doc? (1972). | ||
| 1972 | Game of Death | Bruce Lee | Bruce Lee | Bruce Lee died during filming. Several years later, a new story was crafted around the existing footage with other actors standing in for Lee. | |||
| 1974–1975 | Jackpot | Terence Young | Millard Kaufman | William D. Alexander for Paramount Pictures | Richard Burton, James Coburn, Charlotte Rampling | Robert Mitchum was originally signed to co-star. Audrey Hepburn declined an offer to co-star. Burton played Reid Lawerence, an actor "paralysed by a falling lift." A media report claims that Burton would play an academy award-winning actor down on his luck who suddenly wins another academy award. The film was to be shot in Rome and Nice. Another me | |
| 1975 | Bogart Slept Here | Mike Nichols | Neil Simon | Howard W. Koch | Robert De Niro, Marsha Mason | Production shut down after a week of filming, when Nichols realized that De Niro was unable to adjust his intense Method style of acting to Neil Simon's precise dialogue. Simon reconceived the story, which was filmed two years later as The Goodbye Girl. | |
| 1975 | The New Spartans | Jack Starrett | Oliver Reed (as a Colonel), Susan George | Production shut down after nine days of filming. | |||
| 1975 | Closed-Up Tight (a . Fermeture Annuelle) | Cliff Owen | Probably Peter Welbeck (a . Harry Alan Towers) | Harry Alan Towers for Barongreen and Canafox Films (Montreal). | Marty Feldman (cat burglar), Annie Belle (his daughter), Ron Moody, Robin Askwith, Terry-Thomas, Yvon Dufour, Jacques Dufilho. | Production began in August 1975. Filmed for two weeks. A British-French-Canadian co-production. Rémy Julienne was stunt co-ordinator. | |
| 1975 | Trick or Treat | Michael Apted | based on Ray Connolly's novel | David Puttnam and Sandy Lieberson for Goodtimes Enterprises; also EMI Films and Playboy Productions | Bianca Jagger, Jan Smithers | Shot in Rome and about forty minutes of usable footage was shot before the shoot was cancelled. | |
| 1972–1976 | Vileness Fats | Graeme Whifler & The Residents | The Residents | The Residents | Jay Clem, George Ewart, Marge Howard, Sally Lewis, Hugo Olson, Margaret Smyk & Danny Williams | From 1972 to 1976 multi-media group The Residents worked on a film called Vileness Fats. It was to be 'The Ultimate Underground film' and was teased in a number of their musical releases from that period, however in 1976 the project was unexpectedly abandoned by the group. In 1984 a short cut of scenes from the film was released on VHS as "Whatever | |
| 1977 | Who Killed Bambi? | Russ Meyer, then Jonathan Kaplan | Roger Ebert and Malcolm McLaren | The Sex Pistols Marianne Faithfull | Intended partly as a vehicle to bring the Sex Pistols to American attention, Russ Meyer was three days into principal photography in October 1977 when production studio 20th Century Fox withdrew, dooming the project. | ||
| 1985 | The Two Jakes | Robert Towne | Robert Towne | Robert Evans for Paramount Pictures | Jack Nicholson, Robert Evans, Kelly McGillis | Shut down during production because of disputes between writer-director Towne and producer/co-star Evans. The film was eventually shot and released in 1990 with Nicholson directing; this version co-starred Harvey Keitel and Meg Tilly. | |
| 1987 | Apt Pupil | Alan Bridges | Ken Wheat, Jim Wheat | Richard Kobritz | Nicol Williamson, Rick Schroder | An adaptation of Stephen King's novella Apt Pupil began filming in 1987 with Williamson cast as Kurt Dussander and Schroder cast as Todd Bowden. After ten weeks of filming, the production suffered from a lack of funds from its production company, Granat Releasing, and the film had to be placed on hold. An opportunity came to complete the film a yea | |
| 1988 | Atuk | Alan Metter | Tod Carroll | Elliot Abbott, Charles Roven, Don Carmody for United Artists | Sam Kinison, Christopher Walken, Ben Affleck | Based on Mordecai Richler's 1963 novel The Incomparable Atuk. Apparently one scene was shot before Kinison demanded re-writes and the production was shut down. | |
| 1989 | Gone in 60 Seconds 2 | H. B. Halicki | H. B. Halicki | H. B. Halicki | H. B. Halicki, Denice Shakarian | Halicki began filming the sequel to his 1974 film Gone in 60 Seconds during the summer of 1989 but was killed while filming a stunt on August 20, 1989, and the film was never completed. | |
| 1990 | Arrive Alive | Jeremiah S. Chechik | Michael O'Donoghue, Mitch Glazer | Art Linson for Paramount Pictures | Willem Dafoe, Joan Cusack | Cancelled by Paramount executives after they watched the first few days of dailies. | |
| 1991 | Dylan | David Drury | Jonathan Brett | Patrick Dromgoole | Gary Oldman, Uma Thurman | A biography of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, the film was shut down after nine days of shooting when Oldman "collapsed on the set," suffering from "nervous exhaustion." | |
| 1991 | Sokrovishcha pod Goroy (Сокровища под Горой) | Roman Mitrofanov | Nikolai Karachentsov | An animated fantasy film adaptation of The Hobbit. The project failed due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union and lack of financing. | |||
| 1991–1997 | Dimension | Lars von Trier | Lars von Trier and Niels Vørsel | Peter Aalbæk Jensen | Jean-Marc Barr, Udo Kier and Stellan Skarsgård | In 1990, it was originally intended to produce only in three and four-minute segments every year for a period of 33 years for a final release in 2024, but Trier lost his enthusiasm for the project due to his struggle in recent works, notably the "Golden Heart" trilogy (consisting of Breaking the Waves, Idioterne, and Dancer in the Dark). In 2010, t | |
| 1992 | Mouche | Marcel Carné | based on Guy de Maupassant's short story | Jacques Quintard | Virginie Ledoyen, Wadeck Stanczak, Roland Lesaffre | Provisionally entitled L'Amour de vivre, financing was withdrawn after only ten days of shooting when the director fell ill. Carné's attempt to "bring [Impressionist painting] to life" failed twice, in the '80s and '90s. | |
| 1992 | Sleepaway Camp IV: The Survivor | Jim Markovic | Tom Clohessy | Krishna Shah | Carrie Chambers, Victor Campos, John Lodico | Principal photography commenced in 1992 in upstate New York before being abandoned when the film's production company, Double Helix Films went bankrupt. The film was intended to go into production again in 2004. However, the surviving footage, which runs at a mere 34 minutes, was made available for the first time when released via the original Regi | |
| 1993 | Dark Blood | George Sluizer | Jim Barton | Daniel Lupi, JoAnne Sellar | River Phoenix, Judy Davis, Jonathan Pryce | Phoenix died during production, after approximately 80% of the film had been shot. In 2012, a cut of the film was screened at several film festivals with director Sluizer providing narration for the scenes that were not shot. | |
| 1997 | Broadway Brawler | Lee Grant | unknown | Joseph Feury | Bruce Willis, Maura Tierney, Daniel Baldwin | A sport-themed romantic comedy about a washed up ice-hockey player. Production was halted after 20 days of principal photography due to an acrimonious relationship between Bruce Willis and director Lee Grant and other crew. The financial loss incurred by the production's implosion obliged Willis to take on three roles at reduced salary for the prod | |
| 1999 | Fight Harm | Harmony Korine | Harmony Korine | Harmony Korine | The premise of the film was to verbally provoke passers-by into a fight. The rules were that Korine couldn't throw the first punch and the person confronted had to be bigger than Korine. To him, Fight Harm was high-comedy reminiscent of Buster Keaton. "I wanted to push humor to extreme limits to demonstrate that there's a tragic component in everyt | ||
| 1999–2000 | The Man Who Killed Don Quixote | Terry Gilliam | Jean Rochefort, Johnny Depp | During the first week of shooting, the actor playing Don Quixote (Jean Rochefort) suffered a herniated disc, and a flood severely damaged the set. The film was cancelled, resulting in an insurance claim of US$15 million. The production of the film was the basis of the 2002 documentary Lost in La Mancha, and Gilliam ultimately completed the film nea | |||
| 2001 | Lily and the Secret Planting | Hettie Macdonald | Lucinda Coxon | Sarah Radclyffe | Winona Ryder, Gael Garcia Bernal | Shut down after four days when Winona Ryder was taken to the hospital with "a gastric infection." Kate Winslet was announced as her replacement, but the film was never restarted. | |
| 2002 | Svyaznoy (Связной) | Sergei Bodrov Jr. | Sergei Bodrov Jr. | Sergei Bodrov Jr., Siergiej Seljanow | Sergei Bodrov Jr., Anna Dubrovskaya, Alexander Mezentsev | An action film with supernatural elements whose production was interrupted by a glacier Kolka–Karmadon collapse in Karmadon Gorge and the death of the film crew, including Sergei Bodrov Jr. | |
| 2006 | Revenge of the Nerds | Kyle Newman | Gabe Sachs and Jeff Judah, Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson, and Adam F. Goldberg | Adam Brody, Dan Byrd, Katie Cassidy, Kristin Cavallari, Jenna Dewan, Chris Marquette, Ryan Pinkston, Efren Ramirez, and Nick Zano | A remake of the first film in the 1980s comedy series was canceled after two weeks of shooting, when Emory University officials read the script and revoked the permission they had given to film; studio executives were disappointed in the dailies. | ||
| 2009–2011 | Yellow Submarine | Robert Zemeckis | Dean Lennox Kelly, Peter Serafinowicz, Cary Elwes, Adam Campbell, and David Tennant | The CGI remake of the 1968 animated Beatles classic film was cancelled following the closure of ImageMovers Digital and the poor box-office results of that studio's last film Mars Needs Moms. Zemeckis considered shopping the remake around to other studios, before he himself gave up on the project. |
| Year of production | Film | Director | Screenwriter | Producer | Cast | Notes | Ref |
| 1926 | A Woman of the Sea | Josef von Sternberg | Josef von Sternberg | Charlie Chaplin | Charlie Chaplin | The film was completed, and given a preview screening, but Chaplin was unsatisfied with it and destroyed all known copies in front of witnesses as a tax write-off in 1933. | |
| 1927 | The American | J. Stuart Blackton | Marian Constance Blackton | George K. Spoor | Bessie Love, Charles Ray | Upon viewing the film, which had been made using the experimental Natural Vision process, producer Spoor decided the production was so bad that he would not release it. | |
| 1939 | Bogurodzica | Jan Fethke, Henryk Korewicki | Edward Puchalski, Ferdynand Goetel | Maria Bogda, Tekla Trapszo, Adam Brodzisz | A sequel to the Pod Twoją obronę movie about story the Józio, who steals his father's plane to fly to London on an important mission, which crashes into the North Sea. Due to the German invasion of Poland, the film's premiere was canceled. | ||
| 1939 | Inżynier Szeruda | Józef Lejtes | A film about miners living in the Polish part of Silesia. Filming was completed in the summer of 1939, and the premiere was scheduled for the fall of the same year. The premiere never took place, which did not take place due to the German invasion of Poland. | ||||
| 1939 | Nad Niemnem | Wanda Jakubowska, Jerzy Zarzycki | Jarosław Iwaszkiewicz | Spółdzielnia Autorów Filmowych | Elżbieta Barszczewska, Jerzy Pichelski, Bogusław Samborski, Mieczysława Ćwiklińska, Ludwik Sempoliński | Completed drama film based on novel Eliza Orzeszkowa of the same name, scheduled for premiere on September 5, 1939, which did not take place due to the German invasion of Poland. However, the German occupiers planned to release the film on the condition that it be remade into anti-Polish propaganda about German settlers oppressed by Poles, set in E | |
| 1939 | Serce Batiara | Michał Waszyński | Emanuel Szlechter, Ludwik Starski | K Popławski | Henryk Vogelfänger, Kazimierz Wajda, Ina Benita | A musical comedy about the Lviv batiars. The production was interrupted by the German invasion of Poland starting World War II. The finished film material was burned during the bombing of Warsaw in 1939. | |
| 1939 | Szatan z siódmej klasy | Konrad Tom | Eugeniusz Bunda, Kornel Makuszyński, Konrad Tom | As-Film | Wanda Bartówna, Mieczysława Ćwiklińska, Jerzy Kaliszewski | A comedy-adventure film based on the novella of the same title. The production could not be completed due to German invasion of Poland starting world war II. | |
| 1944–1945 | Kamerad Hedwig | Gerhard Lamprecht | Toni Huppertz, Ulrich Erfurth, Luise Ullrich | Karl Ritter | Luise Ullrich, Wolfgang Lukschy, Emil Heß, Otto Wernicke, Ilse Fürstenberg, Ullrich Haupt, Franz Weber | A film about a widow that explores the issue of working women. The film was not completed until Germany capitulated. | |
| 1966–1969 | The Deep | Orson Welles | Orson Welles | Jeanne Moreau, Laurence Harvey, Orson Welles | Welles filmed The Deep, an adaptation of the novel Dead Calm, but abandoned the film. A rough edit was assembled by the Munich Film Archive and screened in 2015. | ||
| 1972 | The Day the Clown Cried | Jerry Lewis | Jerry Lewis | Nat Wachsberger | Jerry Lewis | Filming completed in 1972 and a rough cut was made, but the film was never released due to various disputes. The film was met with controversy regarding its premise and content, which features a circus clown who is imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp. Lewis submitted an incomplete print to the Library of Congress under an agreement it not be sc | |
| 1979–1980s | Street of Dreams | Martin Sharp | N/A | Martin Sharp | Tiny Tim | Documentary about the life of Tiny Tim and the 1979 Sydney Ghost Train fire at Luna Park Sydney. Haunted by the subject matter and all the perceived theological connections and synchronicities, Sharp worked obsessively on the film but never finished it during his lifetime. A rough cut was released in 1988 for the purpose of film festival screenings | |
| 1991–1992 | Genghis Khan | Ken Annakin | James Carrington | Enzo Rispoli | Richard Tyson, Charlton Heston, Pat Morita, Julia Nickson-Soul | Ran out of funds, Dissolution of the Soviet Union | |
| 1992–1993 | The Fantastic Four | Oley Sassone | Craig J. Nevius, Kevin Rock | Steven Rabiner | Alex Hyde-White, Jay Underwood, Rebecca Staab, Michael Bailey Smith, Carl Ciarfalio, Ian Trigger, Joseph Culp, Kat Green, George Gaynes | Filming completed in 1993 and a Labor Day weekend release was planned before being pushed to January 19, 1994, only to be cancelled at the last minute. The film's reels were confiscated and cease and desist letters were sent to the cast to halt marketing. Franchise creator Stan Lee claimed that the film was an ashcan production that was never meant | |
| 1996 | Mariette in Ecstasy | John Bailey | Ron Hansen | Frank Price, John Bailey | Rutger Hauer, Mary McDonnell, Eva Marie Saint, John Mahoney, Geraldine O'Rawe | Filming was completed in 1995, and a release in 1996, but it was cancelled due to Savoy Pictures' financial troubles. The director saved the lone 35mm copy of the film and eventually released in the 2019 Camerimage International Film Festival. | |
| 1997–2002 | Daybreak | Randal Atamaniuk | Randal Atamaniuk | Randal Atamaniuk | Collin Doyle, Aaron Talbot, Cameron McLay, José DeSousa, Darcy Shaw | Principal photography was completed in 1997 and a final cut assembled in 2002, but was never finished or screened due to insufficient funds for post production, and has never been released. | |
| 2002 | In God's Hands | Lodge Kerrigan | Lodge Kerrigan | Steven Soderbergh | Maggie Gyllenhaal, Peter Sarsgaard | The film completed principal photography, but the entire project had to be abandoned due to irreparable damage to the negative. | |
| 2004 | Big Bug Man | Bob Bendetson, Peter Shin | Bob Bendetson | Brendan Fraser, Marlon Brando, Michael Madsen | The animated film was planned for release between 2006 and 2008. It was Brando's final performance before his death in July 2004. | ||
| 2007–2016 | Empires of the Deep | Michael French, Jonathan Lawrence, Scott Miller | Jon Jiang, Randall Frakes | Jon Jiang, Harrison Liang | Olga Kurylenko | ||
| 2007 | Hippie Hippie Shake | Beeban Kidron | Lee Hall | Tim Bevan | Cillian Murphy, Sienna Miller | Based on the memoir of the same name by Richard Neville, the film was shot in 2007 and a rough cut was test screened, but director Kidron left the project during post-production and the film was never released. | |
| 2008 | Queen of Media | Furqaan Clover | Kimba Henriques, Furqaan Clover | Richard Miller | Robin Givens, Oliver "Power" Grant | Based on Wendy Williams' biography Wendy's Got the Heat, the film was shot in 2008 with a $3 million budget, but was never released. | |
| 2008–2009 | Black Water Transit | Tony Kaye | Matthew Chapman | Laurence Fishburne, Karl Urban | Budgeted at $23 million, the film was shot in 2008 and a rough cut was screened, but it was never completed due to financial and legal disputes. | ||
| 2009 | Banda Yeh Bindaas Hai | Ravi Chopra | Ravi Chopra | Ravi Chopra | Lara Dutta, Govinda, Boman Irani, Tabu | An unauthorized remake of My Cousin Vinny in Hindi, which was scheduled for release in 2009, was blocked by 20th Century Fox while in post-production due to copyright infringement on My Cousin Vinny, for which the studio sought compensation. Ultimately the 20th Century Fox obtained compensation from BR Films, and the film never saw an official rele | |
| 2010 | Prankstar | Tom Green | Tom Green | Katy Wallin | Tom Green | The mockumentary written by, directed by, and starring Tom Green was completed in 2010 and announced for release later than year, but never materialized. | |
| 2011–2012 | The Power of Zhu/The Secret of Zhu/Journey to GloE | Cepia LLC created The Dream Garden Company for 4 films with distribution by Universal Pictures. On September 27, 2011, the ZhuZhu Pets franchise first full-length feature film Quest for Zhu was released straight-to-DVD. A second full-length feature film, The Power of Zhu, probably in the works and has a trailer, potentially being released on DVD so | |||||
| 2010s | Poe | Michael Sporn | Animator Michael Sporn was producing and directing an animated feature based the life of Edgar Allan Poe when he died in January 2014. | ||||
| 2012–2015 | B .: Bureau of Otherworldly Operations | Tony Leondis | Matt Bomer, Jennifer Coolidge, Rashida Jones, Bill Murray, Seth Rogen, Octavia Spencer | The film was announced by DreamWorks in early 2009 and was intended to be an animated film about the titular agency, whose mission was to protect the Earth from a ghost invasion, whose members, the B . organization, are themselves ghosts. Production began in 2012, with a planned June 2015 release, which was previously postponed several times. Du | |||
| 2012 | Killing Winston Jones | Joel David Moore | Justin Trevor Winters | Albert Sandoval, Daemon Hillin, Tom Somerset, Peter Winther | Danny Glover, Richard Dreyfuss, Jon Heder, Danny Masterson | The dark comedy was shot in late 2012 and was originally scheduled to be released in theaters in 2014. However, no release was announced and the studio has not made any statements about the film since 2014. The release was reportedly cancelled due to the rape allegations and criminal trial against Danny Masterson, who plays a prominent role. | |
| 2015 | The Long Home | James Franco | Vince Jolivett, Steve Janas | James Franco, Vince Jolivett, Jay Davis | James Franco, Josh Hutcherson, Tim Blake Nelson, Courtney Love, Timothy Hutton, Giancarlo Esposito, Ashton Kutcher, Josh Hartnett | Filmed in 2015 and planned for release in 2017, it has yet to be released in any format as of 2026. | |
| 2016 | El Señor de la Sierra | Alejandro Irias | Alejandro Irias | Jefferson Sierra | Based on the historical novel of the same name, written by Ramon Amaya. The film was set during the conquest of Honduras, focusing on the life of the indigenous leader Lempira. The film was completed, however, there were delays in its release in national theaters of its country of origin. Currently there is not much information due to its delayed r | ||
| 2016 | Second Blood | Fawzi Al-Khatib | Shehab Al-Fadhli, Fayez Hussein Ali | Mohammed AlSayed, Mehdi Boushahri, Mohamed Al Mubarak | Abdulhadi Al-Khayat, Ranaa Ghandour, Khaled Al-Buraiki, Mojeb Al-Qabandi | A Kuwaiti action film described as a Rambo: First Blood Part II rip-off. It stars bodybuilding champion Abdulhadi Al-Khayat as Yousef Rambu. Reports about the availability of Second Blood vary depending on the sources. The movie was supposed to be released in several Asian countries on VOD and in a few theaters, given a very limited distribution (i | |
| 2016–2017 | Elizabeth, Michael & Marlon | Ben Palmer | Neil Forsyth | Joseph Fiennes, Brian Cox, Stockard Channing | The film, based on an urban legend of Michael Jackson, Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor embarking on a road trip to Ohio following the September 11 attacks, was shot in 2016. It was later announced that the film would be repackaged as an episode of the British TV series Urban Myths, but never aired due to controversy surrounding white actor Fienn | ||
| 2017 | Gore | Michael Hoffman | Andy Paterson | Michael Hoffman, Jay Parini | Kevin Spacey, Michael Stuhlbarg, Douglas Booth | Based on Jay Parini's biography of Gore Vidal, Empire of Self: A Life of Gore Vidal, the film was in post-production when Netflix decided to cancel it following the sexual assault allegations against Kevin Spacey. | |
| 2019 | Klecha | Jacek Gwizdała | Wojciech Pestka, Janusz Petelski, Jacek Gwizdała | Andrzej Stachecki, Jacek Gwizdała | Mirosław Baka, Marcin Bosak | A biographical and historical film about the activities of priest Roman Kotlarz, including the June 1976 protests. The movie was supposed to be a promotion for the region and the city of Radom. Due to the bankruptcy of the producer and lack of funds, the film was not completed. | |
| 2020 | Kukuriraige: Sanxingdui Fantasy | Fumikazu Satou | Huang Jun | Marie Miyake | A Japanese/Chinese animated co-production, the film was originally intended to be released on February 27, 2020, alongside the short film Jewelpet Attack Travel!, but was postponed indefinitely due to production issues. As of 2022, there are no plans to release the film at any point in the foreseeable future. | ||
| 2021–2024 | The Mothership | Matt Charman | Matt Charman | Fred Berger | Halle Berry, Molly Parker, Omari Hardwick | Netflix cancelled the release of the film due to post-production difficulties. | |
| 2021–2022 | Batgirl | Adil El Arbi, Bilall Fallah | Christina Hodson | Kristin Burr | Leslie Grace, J. K. Simmons, Jacob Scipio, Brendan Fraser, Michael Keaton | The film was originally intended to be released on streaming platform HBO Max, with discussions internally about potentially giving the film a theatrical release, especially with the film's estimated $90 million budget. The film was in post-production and had been test screened when Warner Bros. Discovery decided to shelve the film, stating that it | |
| 2022 | Scoob! Holiday Haunt | Bill Haller, Michael Kurinsky | Tony Cervone, Paul Dini | Tony Cervone, Mitchell Ferm | Frank Welker, Andre Braugher | A prequel to 2020's Scoob!, the film was in late stages of post-production and scheduled for a December 2022 release on HBO Max when Warner Bros. Discovery cancelled its release. | |
| 2024 | Jodie | Tracee Ellis Ross (voice) | MTV Entertainment Studios shelved the completed television film in March 2024 instead of airing it on Comedy Central. The company has let the creators attempt to shop it to other studios. | ||||
| 2025 | Golden | Michel Gondry | Martin Hynes | Pharrell Williams | Kelvin Harrison Jr., Halle Bailey, Da'Vine Joy Randolph, Brian Tyree Henry, Quinta Brunson, Janelle Monáe, Jaboukie Young-White, Tim Meadows, Anderson , Missy Elliott, André 3000, Jamilah Rosemond, Jayson Lee | Initially scheduled to be released on May 9, 2025, the film was canceled during post-production by Universal Pictures after $20 million had been spent shooting it, as well as disagreements with the producers. Variety reported in February 2025 that the film was permanently shelved and will not be released. It will also not be offered to other studio |
References
- Clark 1983, p. 139.
- Stare Kinohttps://stare-kino.pl/jutro-nie-idziemy-do-kina-czyli-o-filmach-ktore-padly-ofiara-wojny/
- "CRISPA"https://crispa.uw.edu.pl/object/files/118161/display/Default
- "John Canemaker. "Lost Rainbow". "Print" March/April 1993"http://www.michaelspornanimation.com/splog/?p=2157
- Culturehttps://culture.pl/pl/artykul/filmy-ktorych-nie-bylo
- SlashFilmhttps://www.slashfilm.com/764423/why-stanley-kubricks-epic-napoleon-film-was-never-made/
- ScreenRanthttps://screenrant.com/stanley-kubrick-movies-canceled-unmade-reasons-not-happen/
- Richardson 1993, p. 273.
- The New York Timeshttps://www.nytimes.com/1972/02/27/archives/busy-as-a-bogdanovich-busy-as-a-bogdanovich.html
- Texas Monthlyhttps://www.texasmonthly.com/arts-entertainment/true-west/
- YouTubehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V_m5Q51R0sA
- Scandinavian Blue: The Erotic Cinema of Sweden and Denmark in the 1960s and 1970s
- The Sydney Morning Heraldhttps://newspapers.com/article/the-sydney-morning-herald/21806390/
- The Des Moines Registerhttps://www.newspapers.com/article/the-des-moines-register/21805037/
- A . Weiler, "Paramount Signs for Six—New Films Under Way", The Shreveport Journal, 13 December 1973, 8B.
- "'The Prometheus Crisis' to go into production", The Greeley Daily Tribune, 28 December 1973, p. 19.
- "Meltdown: Screenplay by John Carpenter"https://script-fix.com/meltdown-unproduced-script-john-carpenter/
- "COVERAGE CASE STUDY: Meltdown by John Carpenter"https://script-fix.com/coverage-case-study-meltdown-john-carpenter/
- "The Curse Of The Yellow Jersey – The Cycling Film Hollywood Loved But Could Never Make"https://www.podiumcafe.com/book-corner/2015/10/4/9448769/the-curse-of-the-yellow-jersey-the-cycling-film-hollywood-loved-but
- Los Angeles Timeshttps://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-09-19-ca-10697-story.html