Gore Verbinski
Gregor Justin "Gore" Verbinski (born March 16, 1964) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer recognized for his work across live-action and animated genres.[1][2] His breakthrough came with the 2002 horror remake The Ring, which grossed over $249 million worldwide on a $48 million budget, establishing him as a director capable of blending suspense with visual innovation.[1] Verbinski achieved mainstream commercial success directing the first three installments of Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean franchise: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003), Dead Man's Chest (2006), and At World's End (2007), which collectively earned billions at the box office and revitalized the pirate genre through elaborate action sequences and practical effects.[3][4] Prior to features, he built his reputation in advertising, creating the iconic 1993 Budweiser "Frogs" campaign that won a Cannes Silver Lion and multiple Clio Awards for its creative execution.[4][5] Transitioning to animation, Verbinski directed Rango (2011), a Western starring Johnny Depp as a chameleon, which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and praised for its homage to classic cinema amid a $135 million production involving innovative motion-capture techniques.[6][7] His filmography also includes Mouse Hunt (1997), his live-action debut, and The Weather Man (2005), showcasing versatility from family comedies to dramatic character studies, though subsequent projects like A Cure for Wellness (2017) received mixed reception for their ambitious but polarizing narratives.[1][8]Early life
Family background and childhood
Gregor Justin Verbinski was born on March 16, 1964, in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, to Laurette Ann McGovern and Victor Vincent Verbinski.[1][9] His father worked as a nuclear physicist at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.[10][1] Verbinski was the third of five children; his siblings included Janine, Claire, Diane, and Steven.[10] His paternal grandparents were Polish immigrants, making his father a first-generation American of Polish descent.[9][10] In 1967, when Verbinski was three years old, the family relocated from Tennessee to California, where he spent most of his childhood in the La Jolla area near San Diego.[1][11] Limited public details exist on his early upbringing, though he later recalled developing an interest in filmmaking during high school through amateur projects with friends.[5]Education and formative influences
Verbinski attended La Jolla High School in San Diego, California, where he participated actively in drama classes during the early 1980s.[12] Following graduation, he enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Theater, Film and Television, a competitive program known for its rigorous training in filmmaking.[5] He graduated in 1987 with a Bachelor of Arts in film, honing skills in directing and production that laid the groundwork for his professional entry into commercials and music videos.[5] In his youth, Verbinski drew formative influences from a mix of literature, music, and comedy that shaped his affinity for surreal and dark narratives. His sister introduced him to Franz Kafka's The Metamorphosis at a young age, which profoundly impacted his worldview alongside Black Sabbath's album Master of Reality.[1][13] He also cited Monty Python sketches and films by Sergio Leone and Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove as early touchstones, fostering an interest in blending absurdity with tension—elements evident in his later genre-blending work.[13][14] These pursuits paralleled his passion for music, where he played guitar in local punk and alternative bands, bridging creative outlets that informed his visual storytelling style.[1]Early career
Music and creative pursuits
Verbinski's early involvement in music centered on the Los Angeles punk and rock scenes of the 1980s, where he performed as a guitarist in multiple bands. He played in The Daredevils, a punk rock group that featured Brett Gurewitz—later founder of Bad Religion and Epitaph Records—and drummer Josh Freese, who would go on to work with acts like The Vandals and Nine Inch Nails.[1] This period immersed him in the DIY ethos of the local underground, fostering skills in performance and collaboration that influenced his transition to visual media.[15] He also contributed to other ensembles, including Thelonius Monster alongside drummer Danny Heifetz, and groups such as Bulldozer and The Drivers, reflecting a broader engagement with the era's alternative rock circuit.[10] These musical endeavors, conducted amid the vibrant but competitive L.A. scene, provided Verbinski with foundational experiences in creative expression and group dynamics, though none of the bands achieved significant commercial releases during his tenure.[15] Beyond performing, Verbinski's creative pursuits extended to rudimentary filmmaking, often produced collaboratively with bandmates as low-budget experiments. These early shorts, shot on available equipment, marked his initial forays into directing and editing, blending musical influences with narrative improvisation and serving as precursors to his professional video work.[1] Such activities underscored a hands-on approach to artistry, prioritizing experimentation over polished output in an environment unconstrained by industry standards.Advertising and commercial work
Verbinski entered the advertising field in the early 1990s following his music video directing, producing spots through Palomar Pictures for brands such as Nike, Coca-Cola, Canon, Skittles, United Airlines, and Sprite.[16] [17] His breakthrough came with the 1995 Budweiser Frogs commercial, which debuted during Super Bowl XXIX on January 29, 1995, and depicted three realistic puppet frogs—created by Stan Winston Studio—croaking "Bud-weis-er" in a swamp setting.[18] [19] [20] The 60-second spot, conceived by D'Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles, achieved widespread cultural impact, spawning merchandise and parodies, though it ranked ninth in USA Today's Ad Meter for that year.[21] [19] For this campaign and other commercials, Verbinski received four Clio Awards and a Cannes Advertising Silver Lion.[22] [16] Additional notable works include Nike's "100 Foot Hoop" commercial and Dell's "Pogo" spot in 1998.[23] [24]Music videos and short films
Verbinski's professional directing career commenced in the late 1980s with music videos for punk and alternative rock bands, primarily while working at Palomar Pictures in Los Angeles.[1] His debut effort was the 1989 video for NOFX's "S&M Airlines," featuring surreal and energetic visuals aligned with the band's irreverent punk style.[25] Subsequent works included videos for Bad Religion's "American Jesus" (1993), which employed provocative religious imagery to critique consumerism and faith; Monster Magnet's "Negasonic Teenage Warhead" (1995), showcasing psychedelic stoner rock aesthetics; and The Crystal Method's "Born Too Slow" (2001), incorporating high-energy electronic elements later in his video output.[26] Other collaborations encompassed bands such as L7, 24-7 Spyz, and Vicious Rumors, establishing Verbinski's reputation for inventive, low-budget productions that blended dark humor, animation, and kinetic editing techniques.[10] These music videos honed Verbinski's visual storytelling skills, often drawing from his background in animation and set design, and served as a proving ground before transitioning to commercials and features.[5] While no major awards are documented specifically for his video work, the projects contributed to his early industry network and stylistic foundations, evident in recurring motifs like exaggerated character dynamics and genre-blending absurdity.[27] In parallel, Verbinski directed his first short film, The Ritual (1996), a 10-minute black comedy he also wrote, depicting three friends—one versed in voodoo—grappling with a corpse in their living room amid existential banter and ritualistic absurdity.[28] Shot on 16mm film with cinematographer Neil Shapiro, the piece starred Eric Beer, Clint Curtis, and Tammy Lynch, and previewed Verbinski's affinity for macabre humor and confined-space tension, themes later amplified in features like Mouse Hunt (1997). Premiered as a calling card project, The Ritual received limited festival exposure but marked his shift toward narrative shorts, bridging music video brevity with scripted storytelling.[29] No additional short films are attributed to him prior to his feature debut.Film directing career
Debut features and initial breakthroughs (1997–2001)
Verbinski's feature film directorial debut was Mouse Hunt (1997), a slapstick black comedy written by Adam Rifkin and produced by DreamWorks SKG.[30] The story centers on two bumbling brothers, portrayed by Nathan Lane and Lee Evans, who inherit a dilapidated mansion and wage an escalating war against a resourceful mouse obstructing their plans to renovate it into a cheese factory.[30] With a production budget of $38 million, the film emphasized visual gags and practical effects, including animatronic rodents crafted by Stan Winston Studio, marking Verbinski's transition from music videos and commercials to narrative feature storytelling.[31] Released on December 19, 1997, Mouse Hunt earned $61.9 million domestically and $122.4 million worldwide, achieving profitability and appealing to family audiences during the holiday season.[31] The commercial success of Mouse Hunt positioned Verbinski for higher-profile projects, demonstrating his aptitude for kinetic, effects-driven comedy.[31] Critics noted its relentless physical humor and inventive set pieces, though some faulted its formulaic plotting; The New York Times described it as a "mouse full of mischief" reliant on culinary and destructive antics.[32] This breakthrough validated Verbinski's commercial viability, leading DreamWorks to entrust him with The Mexican (2001), a romantic crime comedy scripted by J.H. Wyman.[33] The Mexican featured Brad Pitt as Jerry Welbach, a low-level criminal dispatched to retrieve a cursed antique pistol from Mexico, intertwining his quest with his girlfriend Samantha (Julia Roberts) and mob enforcer Leroy (James Gandolfini).[33] Shot on 35mm film with cinematographer Dariusz Wolski, the $57 million production blended road-trip elements, gun lore, and interpersonal drama, filmed partly on location in Mexico and California.[33] Premiering on March 2, 2001, it debuted at number one domestically with $20.1 million opening weekend, ultimately grossing $66.8 million in North America and $147.8 million globally, buoyed by its star power despite narrative inconsistencies.[34] The film's box office performance further solidified Verbinski's reputation for handling ensemble casts and genre hybrids, paving the way for horror and franchise work, though reviews critiqued its uneven tone and protracted runtime.[34]Horror remakes and blockbuster franchises (2002–2007)
Verbinski directed The Ring (2002), an American remake of the 1998 Japanese horror film Ringu, centering on a cursed videotape that kills viewers seven days after watching it.[35] The production, with a budget of $48 million, began principal photography on November 1, 2001, and wrapped on April 5, 2002, utilizing locations in California and Washington state.[36] Released on October 18, 2002, the film starred Naomi Watts as investigative journalist Rachel Keller and grossed $249 million worldwide, marking a significant commercial hit that revitalized interest in J-horror remakes in Hollywood.[37] Critically, it earned a 72% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with reviewers praising Verbinski's atmospheric tension and visual dread, though some noted deviations from the original's subtlety.[38] The picture won Best Horror Film at the 29th Saturn Awards, alongside a Best Actress nod for Watts.[39] Building on this momentum, Verbinski transitioned to action-adventure with Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003), the inaugural entry in Disney's franchise adaptation of its theme park ride.[40] Starring Johnny Depp as the eccentric Captain Jack Sparrow, alongside Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley, the film blended swashbuckling spectacle, supernatural curses, and humor, released on July 9, 2003.[41] It achieved blockbuster status, grossing over $653 million worldwide against a reported budget exceeding $140 million, propelled by Depp's improvisational performance and elaborate practical effects.[42] The movie received an 79% Rotten Tomatoes score, lauded for its entertainment value and Verbinski's kinetic direction, though critiqued for formulaic plotting.[41] The franchise's success prompted sequels under Verbinski's direction: Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006) and Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007).[43] Dead Man's Chest, released July 7, 2006, introduced antagonist Davy Jones and expanded the lore with high-seas chases and CGI-heavy sea creatures, earning praise for visual effects that secured an Academy Award nomination.[44] It held a 53% Rotten Tomatoes rating, with mixed feedback on pacing amid escalating spectacle.[45] At World's End, concluding the original trilogy on May 25, 2007, featured global pirate alliances and a maelstrom climax, grossing over $963 million to become 2007's top earner despite criticisms of narrative bloat and overlength.[46] Verbinski's work on the Pirates series emphasized practical stunts augmented by digital enhancements, grossing billions collectively and cementing his reputation for franchise-defining blockbusters.[4]Animation success and Western misfires (2011–2013)
In 2011, Verbinski directed Rango, an animated Western comedy featuring Johnny Depp as the voice of the titular chameleon protagonist who aspires to heroism in a desert town.[47] The film, produced by Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount Pictures with a budget of $135 million, earned $245.7 million worldwide, marking a commercial success.[48] Critically acclaimed for its visual style, humor, and homage to classic Westerns, Rango received a 72% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 242 reviews.[49] At the 84th Academy Awards in 2012, it won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature, Verbinski's first in that category.[50] Transitioning to live-action, Verbinski helmed The Lone Ranger in 2013, a Disney production reimagining the titular radio-serial hero with Armie Hammer as John Reid and Depp as Tonto.[51] The film, shot with a reported budget escalating to $225 million amid production delays and reshoots, opened on July 3 to mixed reviews and underperformed domestically with $89.3 million in North American earnings.[52] Worldwide, it grossed $260.5 million, resulting in an estimated $160–190 million loss for Disney after marketing costs. Critics noted tonal inconsistencies and excessive runtime, yielding a 30% Rotten Tomatoes score from 246 reviews, though some praised its action sequences and Verbinski's ambitious visuals. The project's failure contributed to scrutiny over Hollywood's Western revival attempts and high-budget risks.Psychological thrillers and industry hiatus (2016–present)
In 2016, Verbinski directed A Cure for Wellness, a psychological horror thriller produced by Regency Enterprises and distributed by 20th Century Fox.[53] The film follows a young Wall Street executive, portrayed by Dane DeHaan, sent to retrieve his company's CEO from a remote Alpine sanatorium, where he uncovers sinister medical experiments involving eels and unethical therapies.[53] Verbinski employed his signature visual style, including elaborate practical effects and Gothic architecture inspired by Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain, to build an atmosphere of creeping dread and institutional conspiracy.[54] Despite a $40 million budget, the film grossed approximately $40.4 million worldwide, marking a commercial disappointment exacerbated by negative word-of-mouth and competition from higher-profile releases. Critically, A Cure for Wellness polarized audiences and reviewers, earning a 42% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 210 reviews, with detractors citing its overlong runtime and convoluted plot twists as detracting from its atmospheric strengths.[55] Verbinski described the project as a deliberate pivot toward original, auteur-driven storytelling after franchise fatigue, emphasizing themes of corporate exploitation and bodily autonomy in interviews.[54] However, its failure, compounded by the prior box-office loss on The Lone Ranger (2013), contributed to Verbinski's placement in what industry observers term "director's jail," a period of reduced studio opportunities for filmmakers following consecutive underperformers.[56] Following A Cure for Wellness, Verbinski entered an extended hiatus from feature films, spanning nearly nine years without a theatrical release, during which he reportedly developed unproduced projects such as a North Korea-set thriller that collapsed due to geopolitical sensitivities.[54] This break aligned with a broader pattern of selective project choices, as Verbinski expressed frustration with Hollywood's risk-averse financing for mid-budget originals amid the dominance of superhero tentpoles and streaming content.[56] He maintained a low public profile, occasionally contributing to uncredited advisory roles or short-form media, but avoided major commitments until securing financing for independent ventures.[57] In 2025, Verbinski emerged from hiatus with Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die, a sci-fi thriller starring Sam Rockwell and Michael Peña, acquired by Briarcliff Entertainment for U.S. distribution with a planned wide theatrical release on January 30, 2026.[58] Described as a madcap, genre-bending narrative involving high-stakes adventure and psychological tension, the film represents Verbinski's return to original IP after years of development limbo, produced on a modest budget emphasizing practical effects over CGI spectacle.[59] Early festival screenings and reviews highlighted its inventive visuals and thematic exploration of existential risk, positioning it as a potential rehabilitation of Verbinski's commercial standing amid ongoing industry shifts toward theatrical comebacks for established directors.[59] As of October 2025, no further projects have been greenlit, though Verbinski has teased interest in animated features and international collaborations to circumvent U.S. studio constraints.[56]Artistic approach and themes
Visual style and technical innovations
Verbinski's visual style emphasizes immersive, tactile environments that blend practical effects with digital enhancements to heighten narrative tension and spectacle. In The Ring (2002), he collaborated with cinematographer Bojan Bazelli to employ a desaturated, cyan-toned palette with soft, diffused lighting, creating an pervasive sense of unease through muted greens and blues that evoke isolation and dread.[60] This approach extended to dynamic camera movements and subtle distortions in scene transitions, amplifying psychological horror without relying on overt jump scares.[61] In the Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy (2003–2007), Verbinski pioneered advancements in motion capture and CGI integration, particularly through Industrial Light & Magic (ILM). For Dead Man's Chest (2006), the depiction of Davy Jones utilized ILM's Image-Based Motion Capture (IMocap) system, which combined high-resolution video reference with digital sculpting to achieve fluid, organic tentacle movements and expressive facial animations that set a benchmark for fully CGI humanoids in blockbuster cinema.[62] The films also innovated large-scale water simulations and ship dynamics, rendering over 1,000 complex visual effects shots per installment to simulate realistic ocean physics and cannon fire amid practical sets.[63] Verbinski's most distinctive technical leap occurred in Rango (2011), his debut in feature animation, where he directed ILM to forgo motion capture in favor of keyframe animation informed by live-action references and virtual scouting. This hybrid pipeline treated the CGI desert town as a "live-action" set, incorporating subsurface scattering for reptilian skin textures, dynamic dust simulations, and lens-based distortions to mimic 1960s Western cinematography, resulting in a photorealistic yet stylized aesthetic that earned the film the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature—the first for a non-Pixar production.[64][65] Such methods underscored his preference for grounded, physics-driven visuals over abstract stylization, influencing subsequent ILM animation workflows.[66]Narrative techniques and recurring motifs
Verbinski's narrative structures frequently deviate from linear conventions, incorporating non-chronological framing devices, ensemble-driven plots, and self-referential commentary on genre tropes to underscore themes of illusion and fabrication. In The Lone Ranger (2013), for instance, the story unfolds through a circus exhibit's retrospective narration, subverting the traditional Western hero's journey by foregrounding the myth-making process itself rather than unadulterated heroism.[67] Similarly, Rango (2011) employs a chameleon's identity crisis as a meta-narrative on performance and Western archetypes, drawing parallels to film history while blending animation with live-action stylistic nods to spaghetti Westerns and existential quests.[68] These techniques prioritize thematic depth over straightforward plotting, often resulting in sprawling, digressive arcs that reward repeat viewings for their layered allusions.[69] A hallmark motif across Verbinski's oeuvre is the exploration of deception and concealed identities, manifesting as literal masks, shapeshifting, or fabricated personas that blur reality and performance. This recurs in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003), where characters like Jack Sparrow thrive on ruse and disguise amid supernatural curses, echoing the film's critique of theatrical piracy as constructed spectacle.[70] In The Ring (2002), the viral videotape serves as a deceptive artifact propagating incorporeal horror, with the antagonist's ghostly form symbolizing unresolved, hidden traumas that infiltrate the viewer's world.[71] Rango extends this to an animal protagonist's performative reinvention in a parched frontier, critiquing American self-mythologizing through motifs of water scarcity and illusory oases.[72] Supernatural curses and technological mediation form another persistent thread, linking horror origins to broader existential dread. The cursed tape in The Ring evolves into the eponymous spa's hydrotherapy conspiracies in A Cure for Wellness (2016), where water—recurring as both life source and vector of decay—facilitates bodily and psychological invasion, often via archaic machinery.[73] Verbinski integrates dark humor into these motifs, undercutting terror with whimsical absurdity, as in the undead antics of Pirates sequels or the gothic excesses of The Weather Man (2005), where archery mishaps punctuate familial disintegration.[74] This blend yields narratives that deconstruct media consumption, positioning audiences as complicit in the stories' viral or mythic propagation.[27]Reception and legacy
Critical evaluations
Critics have frequently praised Gore Verbinski for his command of visual storytelling and technical innovation, particularly in creating immersive atmospheres through cinematography, production design, and effects, as seen in films like The Ring (2002), where reviewers highlighted his ability to sustain an unrelenting air of dread from the opening scenes onward.[38] This strength extends to Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003), lauded by Roger Ebert for its thrilling action sequences and swashbuckling energy despite protracted battle durations that occasionally tested patience.[75] Similarly, Rango (2011) earned acclaim for its photorealistic animation and inventive aesthetic, blending Western tropes with hallucinatory flair, contributing to its 88% approval on Rotten Tomatoes and Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.[49] However, Verbinski's work has drawn consistent criticism for narrative inconsistencies, emotional shallowness, and overreliance on spectacle at the expense of coherent plotting or character depth. In A Cure for Wellness (2016), while the film's gothic visuals and Swiss Alpine sanatorium setting impressed for their audacious atmosphere, outlets like The Guardian faulted it for plot holes and illogical progression, rendering the thriller more style than substance.[76] Roger Ebert's review echoed this, describing it as a visually fetishistic endeavor that falters as a dramatic feature due to underdeveloped arcs.[77] Sequels such as Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007) amplified complaints of bloat and indulgence, with extended runtimes diluting focus amid escalating action.[75] Analyses of Verbinski's oeuvre often note a stylistic eclecticism—influenced by Buster Keaton's physical comedy and Sergio Leone's epic vistas—but question his consistency in emotional resonance or thematic depth, positioning him as a proficient craftsman rather than a auteur with unified motifs.[78] The Lone Ranger (2013) exemplifies this divide: dismissed by many for messiness and excess despite visual ambition, yet defended by select critics as an entertaining, mournful epic critiquing Western myths.[79] Recent output, including Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die (2025), has elicited positive notes on its madcap adventure and Gilliam-esque whimsy, suggesting potential evolution beyond prior pitfalls.[59] Overall, Verbinski's reception reflects a director excelling in sensory immersion but challenged by scripting rigor, with peaks in horror and animation outweighing lulls in live-action blockbusters.Commercial outcomes and financial risks
Verbinski's direction of the first three Pirates of the Caribbean films from 2003 to 2007 yielded extraordinary commercial results, collectively grossing over $2.68 billion worldwide against escalating budgets that reached $300 million for At World's End.[80] The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) earned $654 million on a $140 million budget, launching the franchise and transforming Disney's theme park attraction into a blockbuster property.[81] Dead Man's Chest (2006) surpassed $1 billion globally, becoming one of the first films to achieve that milestone, while At World's End (2007) added $963 million despite production costs ballooning due to complex action sequences and visual effects.[82] [83] These outcomes underscored Verbinski's ability to deliver high returns on tentpole investments, with the trilogy's success driven by Johnny Depp's star power and the films' blend of spectacle and humor, though rising budgets reflected inherent risks in sequel escalation and special effects dependency.[84] His 2011 animated feature Rango, produced by Nickelodeon Movies and Paramount, achieved solid profitability with $245 million in worldwide grosses against a $135 million budget, marking a successful pivot to original animation outside dominant studios like Pixar or DreamWorks.[85] The film's performance, bolstered by Depp's voice work and its Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, demonstrated Verbinski's versatility in lower-stakes (relative to live-action blockbusters) projects, recouping costs through domestic earnings of $123 million and international markets.[48] However, this moderated success highlighted the competitive animation landscape, where Rango's returns, while positive, fell short of franchise-level hauls like those from Pirates. Verbinski's career also involved substantial financial risks, most notably with The Lone Ranger (2013), a $225–250 million Disney production that grossed only $260 million worldwide, resulting in studio losses estimated at up to $190 million after marketing and production overruns from on-location shoots, injuries, and scope creep.[86] [87] The film's failure stemmed from mismatched expectations for a Western revival amid superhero dominance, tonal inconsistencies, and Depp's casting as Tonto, amplifying risks in reviving dormant IP without pre-existing franchise momentum.[88] Similarly, A Cure for Wellness (2017), budgeted at $40 million, underperformed with $27 million in global earnings, representing a flop for Fox that exposed vulnerabilities in mid-budget horror-thrillers reliant on atmospheric visuals over broad appeal.[89] These setbacks illustrate Verbinski's pattern of pursuing ambitious, effects-heavy originals post-Pirates, incurring risks from high upfront costs and audience alienation, contrasting his earlier franchise-driven stability.| Film | Release Year | Production Budget (USD) | Worldwide Gross (USD) | Notable Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | 2003 | 140 million | 654 million | Franchise launch; highly profitable[81] |
| Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest | 2006 | 225 million | 1.066 billion | First to exceed $1B globally[83] |
| Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End | 2007 | 300 million | 963 million | Profitable despite cost overruns[82] |
| Rango | 2011 | 135 million | 245 million | Profitable; Oscar win for animation[85] |
| The Lone Ranger | 2013 | 225–250 million | 260 million | Major loss (~$190M for Disney)[86] |
| A Cure for Wellness | 2017 | 40 million | 27 million | Box office underperformer[89] |