The Philippine Star

Directors ‘shocked’ by axing of $90M Batgirl film

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LOS ANGELES (AFP) — The directors of Batgirl said Wednesday they were “shocked” that the $90M superhero film had been axed by the studio and will now not be released in any format.

Warner Bros. Discovery announced they were shelving the movie adaptation of the DC Comics character, which was to star Leslie Grace in the title role, alongside Michael Keaton as Batman, preventing it from being seen in either theaters or on streaming platform HBO Max.

“We are saddened and shocked by the news. We still can’t believe it,” directors Adil El Arbi and Bilall Fallah wrote on Instagram. “As directors, it is critical that our work be shown to audiences, and while the film was far from finished, we wish that fans all over the world would have had the opportunit­y to see and embrace the final film themselves.”

The movie had completed principal photograph­y and much of the post-production work — where special effects, sound and graphics are added — was also done.

Star Grace (In the Heights) released an upbeat statement on her Instagram account Wednesday night, saying she was “proud of the love, hard work and intention all of our incredible cast and tireless crew put into this film over seven months in Scotland. I feel blessed to have worked among absolute greats and forged relationsh­ips for a lifetime in the process!”

Her efforts were applauded by El Arbi and Fallah, who described themselves as “huge fans of Batman since we were little kids.”

“It was a dream to work with such fantastic actors like Michael Keaton, J.K. Simmons, Brendan Fraser... and especially the great Leslie Grace, who portrayed Batgirl with so much passion, dedication and humanity,” the Bad Boys for Life directing duo added.

The move sent shockwaves through Hollywood, where industry veterans said it was unpreceden­ted for a movie to be so close to completion — and with so much money already spent — and not be released.

Batgirl appears to have fallen victim to a change in corporate strategy after a merger between Warner Bros. and Discovery. Warner Bros. had committed to making movies that could go straight to HBO Max as part of an effort to boost subscriber­s in the increasing­ly crowded streaming sector.

The decision, which was driven partially by a need to bypass COVID-hit theaters in 2021, was not popular among creatives and appears to have been rolled back after the tie-up with Discovery. Trade title Variety quoted industry insiders as saying Batgirl had fallen between two stools — not big and glitzy enough for a theatrical release, with its expensive marketing requiremen­ts, but too big to make economic sense in the belt-tightening streaming landscape.

Variety said the $90M hole this would leave in the studio’s balance sheet would probably be dealt with via a tax write-down — a process where companies reduce their exposure to tax by subtractin­g losses from their profits.

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