Francis Ford Coppola’sMegalopolishas been an unmitigated box office disaster, but the failure of Kevin Costner’sHorizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1proves it could’ve been so much worse.MegalopolisandHorizon: An American Sagaboth took a weirdly similar path to the big screen. In both cases, a legendary figure in the film industry (Godfatherdirector CoppolaandYellowstonestar Costner, respectively) put their own money into a ridiculously ambitious passion project that ultimately didn’t do very well at the box office when their creators finally managed to get them made.

NeitherHorizonnorMegalopoliscame close to making back their production budget at the box office (let alone the marketing and exhibition costs).Horizoncost $50 million to produce, with some of it coming out of Costner’s own pocket, and grossed just $31,497,309 (viaThe Numbers).Megalopoliswas an even bigger box office bomb, so much so that it’s been dubbed “Mega-flop-olis.” It cost at least $120 million to produce, financed entirely by Coppola, and it’s grossed only $13,312,419 (viaBox Office Mojo). ButMegalopolishas one advantage overHorizon.

Adam Driver on the poster for Megalopolis

Kevin Costner’s Horizon Isn’t Guaranteed To Be Completed (Unlike Coppola’s Megalopolis)

Megalopolis Is Coppola’s Finished Vision, But Horizon Is Just The First Chapter Of Costner’s Vision

Although it must be disappointing that hardly anyone is going to seeMegalopolisand he’s barely made back 10% of his investment,Coppola can rest easy knowing that his vision is complete. Coppola can sit back and enjoy the fact that, whether it was successful or not, he finally made the movie that had been rattling around in his head for four decades and put it out into the world.Megalopolisis now out there in all its gloryfor a cult fan base to eventually rediscover.

What Megalopolis Means For Francis Ford Coppola’s Career & Future Movies

Francis Ford Coppola made the movie he wanted to make with Megalopolis — but its box office failure means it’ll be a lot tougher to make his next one.

Unfortunately for Costner,that’s not the case forHorizon. The film that bombed at the box office this year is just the first offour plannedHorizonmovies. Now that the first chapter has flopped and the second chapter has been indefinitely shelved,Costner’sHorizonseries will likely remain unfinished. Even ifChapter 2does eventually see the light of day, it’s unlikely that Costner will get the funding needed to make the third and fourth films and complete the saga, because the audience interest clearly isn’t there.

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Horizon & Megalopolis Will Serve As A Warning To Other Big Names Looking To Self-Finance Movies

As It Turns Out, Working Outside The System Is An Easy Way To Lose Money

The box office failure ofHorizonandMegalopoliswill likely serve as a warning to any other big-name Hollywood filmmakers looking to self-finance their own passion projects. While it’s creatively liberating to work outside the system, it doesn’t seem to be a big moneymaker.Not having to answer the notes of studio executives and a corporate marketing department must be refreshing, but they give out those notes for a reason: they understand the market and what audiences are looking for — and, apparently,HorizonandMegalopolisain’t it.

Horizon: An American Saga - Chapter 1

Cast

Horizon: An American Saga - Chapter 1 is set in 1859, following families as they settle in territories from Wyoming to Kansas. The narrative centers around a cowboy on the run with a prostitute and a young boy after a deadly confrontation, exploring the challenges of life in the Old West.