An insanely stacked but widely-panned A-list caper that lost $100 million gets framed on the streaming Top 10

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amsterdam

via 20th Century Studios

If talent were to guarantee success, then Amsterdam would comfortably be the biggest movie of the year. Unfortunately for all involved, though, the exact opposite turned out to be the case.

You’d think a hybrid of mystery thriller and crime caper written and directed by controversial five-time Academy Award nominee David O. Russell that featured Oscar winners Christian Bale, Rami Malek, and Robert De Niro, along with Oscar-nominated stars Margot Robbie and Michael Shannon, Golden Globe winner Anya Taylor-Joy, three-time Emmy and four-time Grammy winner Chris Rock, Golden Globe nominee John David Washington, Primetime Emmy winner Mike Myers, multi-time Emmy nominee Timothy Olyphant, star of the two biggest box office hits in history Zoe Saldaña, along with 11-time Grammy winner and global superstar Taylor Swift, would at least be okay at the absolute bare minimum.

amsterdam
Photo via 20th Century Studios

Instead, Amsterdam ended up with a lousy 33 percent Rotten Tomatoes score, found itself being roasted online for its weapons-grade ensemble being wasted in such drivel, and tanked thunderously at the box office by recouping only $28 million of its $80 million budget, with the additional marketing and distribution costs plunging Amsterdam into the red to the tune of $100 million.

Streaming tends to be a lot more forgiving when it comes to commercial calamities, so perhaps the team behind the unmitigated disaster can take solace that the period-set thriller has become one of the 10 top-viewed titles among iTunes subscribers in the United States, per FlixPatrol. Then again, there’s still no way this thing ever becomes profitable.

Living proof that all the talent in the world can’t polish a turd, Amsterdam came and went without making a splash, an embarrassing fate to befall a project pegged as an awards season contender from the second it was announced.