Despite $90m being spent and a release date being planned for the end of this year, this week Hollywood was rattled when Warner Bros announced that the highly- anticipated Batgirl film - planned for HBO Max - was being shelved. Batgirl, a 'woke', big-budget film featuring a female version of the iconic superhero, was branded 'irredeemable', despite being completely finished. Feedback at test screenings was so awful that it was canned, making it perhaps the most expensive film ever made that will never see the light of day, although it's by no means the only big budget production never to make it on to screens. It joins a graveyard of movies which were awkwardly shelved, including a Louis C.K. directed film about seducing a 17-year-old, a 3D mermaid fantasy, and a spy thriller starring Michael Flatley; of Lord of the Dance fame.
It is perhaps not too surprising that this 1972 film about a circus clown who is imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp has yet to see the light of day
It is perhaps not too surprising that this 1972 film about a circus clown imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp has yet to see the light of day. The plot follows washed-up circus clown Helmut Doork who was once in high demand and toured the world, but found himself with no work at the beginning of World War II. After finding himself ousted from his circus troupe, Doork gets drunk and begins ranting about Adolf Hitler, which sees him arrested by the Gestapo. Doork is interrogated by the Gestapo who imprison him in a Nazi camp for three years, during which time he hopes he will get a chance to argue his case. While in the camp and exiled by other prisoners who mock him, Doork ends up performing for Jewish children, who are being kept separate from other prisoners. However he ends up being used by the guards to lead Jewish children to their deaths in the gas chambers. The enormously controversial storyline led to the film ultimately being axed, but questions about the plot plagued its star, Jerry Lewis, right up until he passed away in 2017. Film critic Jean-Michel Frodon, who is one of the only people to have seen a print of the film, told : 'It's a very bizarre project. [Lewis is] not indulging himself, but he is self-caricaturing.' The movie, which Lewis also directed, remains unfinished, and the American comedian's son has claimed no complete negative of the film exists. However in 2015, Lewis donated an incomplete copy of the film to the Library of Congress, under the stipulation it would not be screened before June 2024. According to a 2018 [url=] article, although copyright battles and mixed criticisms exist, there is still a curiosity and appetite to see the work on screens. CobraGator
Michael Flatley directed, wrote and stars in this thrilling espionage flick - which premiered in 2018 and then mysteriously 'vanished'
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