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* ''Wonderoos'' was a Netflix PreschoolShow that was supposed to debut in 2020, but didn't show up until 4 years later on the Netflix Jr. [=YouTube=] channel.
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* ''ComicBook/Hound2014'': Since the [=1990s=], Paul J. Bolger tried multiple times to adapt the [[Myth/CelticMythology Irish myth of Cú Chulainn]] into a movie for over two decades to no avail. He eventually came back to comics--which he had first tried for the project--and created the graphic novel based on the screenplay he had written with Barry Devlin. [=BreakThru=] Productions in association with Cúchulainn Entertainment published it in three limited volumes between 2014 and 2018 before Creator/DarkHorseComics reprinted it in a single volume in 2022.

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* ''ComicBook/Hound2014'': Since the [=1990s=], Paul J. Bolger tried multiple times to adapt the [[Myth/CelticMythology Irish myth of Cú Chulainn]] into a movie for over two decades to no avail. He eventually came back to comics--which he had first tried for the project--and created the graphic novel based on the screenplay he had written with Barry Devlin. [=BreakThru=] Breakthru Productions in association with Cúchulainn Entertainment published it in three limited volumes between 2014 and 2018 before Creator/DarkHorseComics reprinted it in a single volume in 2022.
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* ''ComicBook/Hound2014'': Since the [=1990s=], Paul J. Bolger tried multiple times to adapt the [[Myth/CelticMythology Irish myth of Cú Chulainn]] into a movie for over two decades to no avail. He eventually came back to comics--which he had first tried for the project--and created the graphic novel based on the screenplay he had written with Barry Devlin. BreakThru Productions in association with Cúchulainn Entertainment published it in three limited volumes between 2014 and 2018 before Creator/DarkHorseComics reprinted it in a single volume in 2022.

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* ''ComicBook/Hound2014'': Since the [=1990s=], Paul J. Bolger tried multiple times to adapt the [[Myth/CelticMythology Irish myth of Cú Chulainn]] into a movie for over two decades to no avail. He eventually came back to comics--which he had first tried for the project--and created the graphic novel based on the screenplay he had written with Barry Devlin. BreakThru [=BreakThru=] Productions in association with Cúchulainn Entertainment published it in three limited volumes between 2014 and 2018 before Creator/DarkHorseComics reprinted it in a single volume in 2022.
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* ''ComicBook/Hound2014'': Since the [=1990s=], Paul J. Bolger tried multiple times to adapt the [[Myth/CelticMythology Irish myth of Cú Chulainn]] into a movie for over two decades to no avail. He eventually came back to comics--which he had first tried for the project--and created the graphic novel based on the screenplay he had written with Barry Devlin. BreakThru Productions in association with Cúchulainn Entertainment published it in three limited volumes between 2014 and 2018 before Creator/DarkHorseComics reprinted it in a single volume in 2022.
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* To celebrate the show's [[MilestoneCelebration 20th anniversary]], the long-delayed ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'' movie was finally announced as part of 2021-2022's ''Gundam SEED Project Ignited'' multimedia project. Contributing to the long delay was the illness, and [[DiedDuringProduction eventual death]], of head writer Chiaki Morosawa, wife of director Mitsuo Fukuda, from an aortic dissection in February 2016.

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* To celebrate the show's [[MilestoneCelebration 20th anniversary]], the long-delayed ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'' movie movie, ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEEDFreedom'', was finally announced as part of 2021-2022's ''Gundam SEED Project Ignited'' multimedia project. Contributing to the long delay was the illness, and [[DiedDuringProduction eventual death]], of head writer Chiaki Morosawa, wife of director Mitsuo Fukuda, from an aortic dissection in February 2016.
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* Before its cancellation, the second season of ''Series/BladeTheSeries'' was going to introduce Comicbook/MoonKnight in order to set up a SpinOff. In 2006, it was announced that Marvel was developing a solo ''Moon Knight'' TV series, but other than writer Jon Cooksey being brought onboard to develop the show in 2008, nothing more was ever heard about it. Then, in 2019, a ''Series/MoonKnight2022'' series was officially ordered for the Creator/DisneyPlus streaming service, with Creator/OscarIsaac later signing on to star as the title character.

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* Before its cancellation, the second season of ''Series/BladeTheSeries'' was going to introduce Comicbook/MoonKnight ComicBook/MoonKnight in order to set up a SpinOff. In 2006, it was announced that Marvel was developing a solo ''Moon Knight'' TV series, but other than writer Jon Cooksey being brought onboard to develop the show in 2008, nothing more was ever heard about it. Then, in 2019, a ''Series/MoonKnight2022'' series was officially ordered for the Creator/DisneyPlus streaming service, with Creator/OscarIsaac later signing on to star as the title character.



** Each figure in the Comicbook/{{Onslaught}} wave by [=ToyBiz=] was originally supposed to include a henchman character as a special bonus, such as a Comicbook/{{HYDRA}} agent, a [[ActuallyADoombot Doombot]], a Hand ninja, a Hellfire Club guard, and so on. Rising production costs forced [=ToyBiz=] to abandon the bonus figure idea, but the Skrull soldier and Brood drone designed for the wave were later released as part of Diamond's Marvel Select line.

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** Each figure in the Comicbook/{{Onslaught}} ComicBook/{{Onslaught}} wave by [=ToyBiz=] was originally supposed to include a henchman character as a special bonus, such as a Comicbook/{{HYDRA}} ComicBook/{{HYDRA}} agent, a [[ActuallyADoombot Doombot]], a Hand ninja, a Hellfire Club guard, and so on. Rising production costs forced [=ToyBiz=] to abandon the bonus figure idea, but the Skrull soldier and Brood drone designed for the wave were later released as part of Diamond's Marvel Select line.
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* ''WesternAnimation/TheLastDaysOfConeyIsland'' from Creator/RalphBakshi was announced in 2005, but due to multiple distributors and production problems, it was eventually out in Development Hell. However, in 2013, Bakshi managed a successful Kickstarter for the film to be made as a short anthology film. It was eventually released to Vimeo on his 77th birthday on October 27th, 2015.

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* ''WesternAnimation/TheLastDaysOfConeyIsland'' from Creator/RalphBakshi was announced in 2005, but due to multiple distributors and production problems, it was eventually out in Development Hell. However, in 2013, Bakshi managed a successful Kickstarter for the film to be made as a short anthology film. It was eventually released to Vimeo Platform/{{Vimeo}} on his 77th birthday on October 27th, 2015.
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Spelling/grammar fix(es)


* In the early 1990s, an animated series based on ''Film/{{Gremlins}}'' called ''Gizmo and the Gremlins'' was going to debut. Due to ''Film/Gremlins2TheNewBatch'' flopping against the heavily-promoted ''Film/DickTracy'', production was cancelled. Almost thiry years after the original show was cancelled, a new Gremlins animated series, ''WesternAnimation/GremlinsSecretsOfTheMogwai'', premiered on the streaming service Max in 2023.

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* In the early 1990s, an animated series based on ''Film/{{Gremlins}}'' called ''Gizmo and the Gremlins'' was going to debut. Due to ''Film/Gremlins2TheNewBatch'' flopping against the heavily-promoted ''Film/DickTracy'', production was cancelled. Almost thiry thirty years after the original show was cancelled, a new Gremlins animated series, ''WesternAnimation/GremlinsSecretsOfTheMogwai'', premiered on the streaming service Max in 2023.

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* Most of ''Music/{{Northward}}'' was written all the way back in 2008 following a propitious jam session between then-Music/AfterForever singer Floor Jansen and Pagan's Mind guitarist Jørn Viggo Lofstad at [=ProgPower USA=] in '07. They planned to record while AF was on what was supposed to just be a hiatus due to [[CreatorBreakdown guitarist Sander Gommans suffering a burnout]]. Then AF broke up altogether, which [[ScrewedByTheNetwork scuttled the recording deal with their label]]. This led Floor Jansen to form Music/{{ReVamp}} as her new full-time band, putting ''Northward'' on hold again. ''Then'' she went through a burnout herself in 2011, after which she was called in to replace Music/AnetteOlzon in Music/{{Nightwish|Band}} on ''very'' short notice (the band later released a documentary about it called ''[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Please Learn the Setlist in 48 Hours]]''). Nightwish finally took a year off in 2017, during which Floor and her partner [[Music/{{Sabaton}} Hannes Van Dahl]] had a daughter and only ''then'' managed to block out time with Lofstad to record ''Northward''. It finally came out, to rave reviews, on 19 October 2018, ''ten years'' after it had originally been envisioned.

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* Most of ''Music/{{Northward}}'' was written all the way back in 2008 following a propitious jam session between then-Music/AfterForever singer Floor Jansen and Pagan's Mind guitarist Jørn Viggo Lofstad at [=ProgPower USA=] in '07. They planned to record while AF was on what was supposed to just be a hiatus due to [[CreatorBreakdown guitarist Sander Gommans suffering a burnout]]. Then AF broke up altogether, which [[ScrewedByTheNetwork scuttled the recording deal with their label]]. This led Floor Jansen to form Music/{{ReVamp}} as her new full-time band, putting ''Northward'' on hold again. ''Then'' she went through a burnout herself in 2011, after which she was called in to replace Music/AnetteOlzon in Music/{{Nightwish|Band}} on ''very'' short notice (the band later released a documentary about it called ''[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Please Learn the Setlist in 48 Hours]]''). Nightwish finally took a year off in 2017, during which Floor and her partner husband [[Music/{{Sabaton}} Hannes Van Dahl]] had a daughter and only ''then'' managed to block out time with Lofstad to record ''Northward''. It finally came out, to rave reviews, on 19 October 2018, ''ten years'' after it had originally been envisioned.



* Music/{{Wintersun}}'s second album, ''Time'', has been in development since 2006 due to a never-ending series of technological mishaps. The first half of the album came out in 2012, but the second half is still being mixed.

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* Music/{{Wintersun}}'s second album, ''Time'', has been in development since 2006 due to a never-ending series of technological mishaps. ''Time''.
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The first half of the album came out spent multiple years in 2012, development that left an eight-year gap since the SelfTitledAlbum. The album was originally announced in 2006, but didn't see the second half is still being mixed.light of day until 2012.
** ''Time II'' was talked about after the release of part 1, and then nothing happened, with the band ultimately releasing the NatureMetal ConceptAlbum ''The Forest Seasons'' in 2017 instead. In February 2023 the band stated in a Facebook post that they had moved on to other projects and ''Time II'' was no longer in active development. However, the announcement and the subsequent single "Warning" were met with derision from fans on social media (compounded by the fact the band had earlier crowdfunded a new recording studio, leading to some fraud accusations), which evidently was the kick in the pants that principal songwriter Jari Mäenpää needed: the band announced in January 2024 that they had finally finished the album after a SequelGap of twelve years.
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* Forest For The Trees' [[SelfTitledAlbum self-titled]] (and so far only) album was being worked on as early as 1993, but didn't see release until 1997 -- [[IAmTheBand chief member]] Carl Stephenson suffered a nervous breakdown that prevented him from working on the album for years. Music/{{Beck}} appeared on a couple of songs, and his vocal ad-libs at the end of "Infinite Cow" are the biggest audible hint of how long the album had been gestating -- due to Beck's VocalEvolution it's easy to surmise that his contributions were most likely recorded around 1993. Also, Carl had coined the term "trip hop" to describe the album's psychedelic hip hop sound, and the phrase appeared in the lyrics to the songs "Dream" and "Paint". By the time the album came out, TripHop was more widely known as a totally different genre. Reportedly, an unnamed second album was completed but remains on [[TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment The Shelf of Album Languishment]] -- the label it was recorded for, [=DreamWorks=] Records, technically no longer exists.

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* Forest For The Trees' [[SelfTitledAlbum self-titled]] (and so far only) album was being worked on as early as 1993, but didn't see release until 1997 -- [[IAmTheBand chief member]] Carl Stephenson suffered a nervous breakdown that prevented him from working on the album for years. Music/{{Beck}} Music/{{Beck|Musician}} appeared on a couple of songs, and his vocal ad-libs at the end of "Infinite Cow" are the biggest audible hint of how long the album had been gestating -- due to Beck's VocalEvolution it's easy to surmise that his contributions were most likely recorded around 1993. Also, Carl had coined the term "trip hop" to describe the album's psychedelic hip hop sound, and the phrase appeared in the lyrics to the songs "Dream" and "Paint". By the time the album came out, TripHop was more widely known as a totally different genre. Reportedly, an unnamed second album was completed but remains on [[TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment The Shelf of Album Languishment]] -- the label it was recorded for, [=DreamWorks=] Records, technically no longer exists.
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* In 2012, Jeff Kinney announced an animated TV special based on ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidCabinFever'' that was set to premiere in 2013. A year later, he was asked about it again and confirmed that it was pushed back to a 2014 release that ultimately never happened. Absolutely nothing else about it was said since then, and many assumed it had been cancelled, especially following the critically-reviled ''Film/DiaryOfAWimpyKidTheLongHaul'' movie. However, with the first two books getting {{Animated Adaptation}}s in 2021 and 2022 respectively, ''WesternAnimation/DiaryOfAWimpyKidChristmasCabinFever'' was announced in January 2023 to also be getting an adaptation. It eventually came out in December of that year.

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* In 2012, Jeff Kinney announced an animated TV special based on ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidCabinFever'' that was set to premiere in 2013. A year later, he was asked about it again and confirmed that it was pushed back to a 2014 release that ultimately never happened. Absolutely nothing else about it was said since then, and many assumed it had been cancelled, especially following the critically-reviled ''Film/DiaryOfAWimpyKidTheLongHaul'' movie. However, with the first two books getting {{Animated Adaptation}}s in 2021 and 2022 respectively, ''WesternAnimation/DiaryOfAWimpyKidChristmasCabinFever'' ''Cabin Fever'' was announced in January 2023 to also be getting an adaptation. It eventually came out in December of that year.year as ''WesternAnimation/DiaryOfAWimpyKidChristmasCabinFever''.
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* In 2012, Jeff Kinney announced an animated TV special based on ''Literature/DiaryOfAWimpyKidCabinFever'' that was set to premiere in 2013. A year later, he was asked about it again and confirmed that it was pushed back to a 2014 release that ultimately never happened. Absolutely nothing else about it was said since then, and many assumed it had been cancelled, especially following the critically-reviled ''Film/DiaryOfAWimpyKidTheLongHaul'' movie. However, with the first two books getting {{Animated Adaptation}}s in 2021 and 2022 respectively, ''WesternAnimation/DiaryOfAWimpyKidChristmasCabinFever'' was announced in January 2023 to also be getting an adaptation. It eventually came out in December of that year.
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* The pilot for ''WesternAnimation/BenAndHollysLittleKingdom'' was made shortly after Season 1 of ''WesternAnimation/PeppaPig'' finished production, but the series didn't premiere until shortly before the third season of Peppa Pig was started on TV, because Season 2 of Peppa Pig put Little Kingdom in development hell. The character of Nanny Plum was almost scrapped before the series entered development hell, but revived while the series was in development hell.
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* After 1997's ''Medazzaland'', Music/DuranDuran began work in earnest on their next album. In the meantime, Music/{{Blondie}} reunited and Nick Rhodes and Warren Cuccurullo were assigned the task of writing some songs for their upcoming album. These songs were never used for some reason and the Blondie reunion album, 1999's ''No Exit'', included only Blondie's songs. Nick and Warren decided to use them for the upcoming Duran Duran album instead. Another complicating factor was the fact that EMI (Duran Duran's record company) dropped them from the label and the band had to find a new record company. Finally in 2000, ''Pop Trash'', whose title is taken from one of the album's songs that were originally written for Blondie ("Pop Trash Movie"), was released on the Creator/{{Disney}}-owned Creator/HollywoodRecords.

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* After 1997's ''Medazzaland'', Music/DuranDuran began work in earnest on their next album. In the meantime, Music/{{Blondie}} Music/{{Blondie|Band}} reunited and Nick Rhodes and Warren Cuccurullo were assigned the task of writing some songs for their upcoming album. These songs were never used for some reason and the Blondie reunion album, 1999's ''No Exit'', included only Blondie's songs. Nick and Warren decided to use them for the upcoming Duran Duran album instead. Another complicating factor was the fact that EMI (Duran Duran's record company) dropped them from the label and the band had to find a new record company. Finally in 2000, ''Pop Trash'', whose title is taken from one of the album's songs that were originally written for Blondie ("Pop Trash Movie"), was released on the Creator/{{Disney}}-owned Creator/HollywoodRecords.
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* Music/PeterGabriel was working on the album ''Music/{{Up|PeterGabrielAlbum}}'' for about 7 years-- he started working on it in 1995 (concurrently with ''I/O'', which as of TheNewTwenties is still in DevelopmentHell), it was supposed to be "near completion" in 1998, and yet it took four more years to finally see release. Then there's the debut album by the side project Big Blue Ball, which was in production for ''eighteen'' years.

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* Music/PeterGabriel was working on the album ''Music/{{Up|PeterGabrielAlbum}}'' for about 7 years-- he started working on it in 1995 (concurrently with ''I/O'', which as of TheNewTwenties is still in DevelopmentHell), 1995, it was supposed to be "near completion" in 1998, and yet it took four more years to finally see release. Then there's the debut album by the side project Big Blue Ball, which was in production for ''eighteen'' years. His album ''I/O'' started development at the same time as ''Up'', yet languished in DevelopmentHell itself until its release in late 2023, after almost three decades.
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* The Louisiana[[note]]now Mercedes-Benz[[/note]] Superdome was another example of its construction. It was originally supposed to break ground in 1968 and be ready to open in time for the 1972 NFL season (with Super Bowl VI that January serving as the final event for Tulane Stadium, which was serving as a temporary home for the New Orleans Saints at the time) and cost $46 million[[note]]in 1968 dollars; now over $312 million[[/note]]. Instead, political wrangling between the developers and Louisiana politicians delayed the groundbreaking until August 11, 1971, and ultimately cost $165 million factorings in inflation, the 1973 Oil Crisis, and construction delays. The Superdome would open for the 1975 season, after more construction delays that forced Super Bowl IX (which was intended to serve as the stadium's grand opening) being moved at the last moment to the aging Tulane Stadium, where that game would be played in cold, windy and rainy conditions.

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* The Louisiana[[note]]now Caesars, formerly Mercedes-Benz[[/note]] Superdome was another example of its construction. It was originally supposed to break ground in 1968 and be ready to open in time for the 1972 NFL season (with Super Bowl VI that January serving as the final event for Tulane Stadium, which was serving as a temporary home for the New Orleans Saints at the time) and cost $46 million[[note]]in 1968 dollars; now over $312 million[[/note]]. Instead, political wrangling between the developers and Louisiana politicians delayed the groundbreaking until August 11, 1971, and ultimately cost $165 million factorings in inflation, the 1973 Oil Crisis, and construction delays. The Superdome would open for the 1975 season, after more construction delays that forced Super Bowl IX (which was intended to serve as the stadium's grand opening) being moved at the last moment to the aging Tulane Stadium, where that game would be played in cold, windy and rainy conditions.
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* ''[[VideoGame/{{Atelier}} Atelier Marie and Elie]]'' had various FanTranslation programs going on for both the original games and the [=PS2=] compilation for well over a decade, before a French team finally delivered the game in English in March 2018, roughly 20 years after the games first hit shelves in Japan.

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* ''[[VideoGame/{{Atelier}} ''[[VideoGame/AtelierSeries Atelier Marie and Elie]]'' had various FanTranslation programs going on for both the original games and the [=PS2=] compilation for well over a decade, before a French team finally delivered the game in English in March 2018, roughly 20 years after the games first hit shelves in Japan.
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* ''Series/AllInTheFamily'': Norman Lear bought the rights to adapt the BritCom ''Series/TilDeathUsDoPart'' in 1966. It wouldn't be until 1968 when a pilot (titled ''Justice For All'') was taped, but ABC dropped it after the ''Turn-On'' fiasco[[note]]The infamous ''Series/LaughIn'' rip-off was cancelled ''during'' its only episode[[/note]]. Another pilot was made the following year (''Those Were the Days'') but it went unnoticed. Then a final pilot was taped in 1970, CBS picked it up, and the show premiered in 1971.

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* ''Series/AllInTheFamily'': Norman Lear bought the rights to adapt the BritCom ''Series/TilDeathUsDoPart'' ''Series/TillDeathUsDoPart'' in 1966. It wouldn't be until 1968 when a pilot (titled ''Justice For All'') was taped, but ABC dropped it after the ''Turn-On'' fiasco[[note]]The infamous ''Series/LaughIn'' rip-off was cancelled ''during'' its only episode[[/note]]. Another pilot was made the following year (''Those Were the Days'') but it went unnoticed. Then a final pilot was taped in 1970, CBS picked it up, and the show premiered in 1971.
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* ''Series/AllInTheFamily'': Norman Lear bought the rights to adapt the BritCom ''Til Death Do Us Part'' in 1966. It wouldn't be until 1968 when a pilot (titled ''Justice For All'') was taped, but ABC dropped it after the ''Turn-On'' fiasco[[note]]The infamous ''Series/LaughIn'' rip-off was cancelled ''during'' its only episode[[/note]]. Another pilot was made the following year (''Those Were the Days'') but it went unnoticed. Then a final pilot was taped in 1970, CBS picked it up, and the show premiered in 1971.

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* ''Series/AllInTheFamily'': Norman Lear bought the rights to adapt the BritCom ''Til Death Do Us Part'' ''Series/TilDeathUsDoPart'' in 1966. It wouldn't be until 1968 when a pilot (titled ''Justice For All'') was taped, but ABC dropped it after the ''Turn-On'' fiasco[[note]]The infamous ''Series/LaughIn'' rip-off was cancelled ''during'' its only episode[[/note]]. Another pilot was made the following year (''Those Were the Days'') but it went unnoticed. Then a final pilot was taped in 1970, CBS picked it up, and the show premiered in 1971.
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* The ''Manga/GiantRobo'' OVA, The Day The Earth Stood Still, took ten years to finish. There are seven episodes.

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* The ''Manga/GiantRobo'' ''Anime/GiantRobo'' OVA, The Day The Earth Stood Still, took ten years to finish. There are seven episodes.
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* ''WesternAnimation/PawsOfFuryTheLegendOfHank'' was announced in 2015 for a 2017 release under the name ''Blazing Samurai''. Sometime during that, its two animation studios, Mass Animation and Arc Productions, after TroubledProduction were both shut down along with the film's main distributor Open Road. The movie was nowhere to be seen despite various companies announcing their work on it and actors stating it was still happening until Creator/{{Paramount}} (under the Paramount Animation brand before switching it last minute to Creator/NickelodeonMovies) finally announced it as ''Paws of Fury''. It finally released on July 15, 2022.

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* ''WesternAnimation/PawsOfFuryTheLegendOfHank'' was announced in 2015 for a 2017 release under the name ''Blazing Samurai''. Sometime during that, its two animation studios, Mass Animation and Arc Productions, after TroubledProduction were both shut down along with the film's main distributor Open Road. The movie was nowhere to be seen despite various companies announcing their work on it and actors stating it was still happening (with the film secured funding by 2020, with production completing in 2021) until Creator/{{Paramount}} (under the Paramount Animation brand before switching it last minute to Creator/NickelodeonMovies) finally announced it as ''Paws of Fury''. It finally released on July 15, 2022.
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* In the early 90's, an animated series based on ''Film/{{Gremlins}}'' called ''Gizmo and the Gremlins'' was going to debut. Due to ''Film/Gremlins2TheNewBatch'' flopping against the heavily-promoted ''Film/DickTracy'', production was cancelled. Almost 30 years after the original show was cancelled, a new Gremlins animated series, ''Gremlins: Secrets of the Mogwai'', will be made for Creator/HBOMax.

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* In the early 90's, 1990s, an animated series based on ''Film/{{Gremlins}}'' called ''Gizmo and the Gremlins'' was going to debut. Due to ''Film/Gremlins2TheNewBatch'' flopping against the heavily-promoted ''Film/DickTracy'', production was cancelled. Almost 30 thiry years after the original show was cancelled, a new Gremlins animated series, ''Gremlins: Secrets of ''WesternAnimation/GremlinsSecretsOfTheMogwai'', premiered on the Mogwai'', will be made for Creator/HBOMax.streaming service Max in 2023.
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* ''Film/TheRoom'' director Tommy Wiseau shot a pilot for a new TV series called ''The Neighbors'' in 2007. Wiseau spent several years pitching the show to various networks until it finally premiered on Hulu in March 2015.

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* ''Film/TheRoom'' ''Film/TheRoom2003'' director Tommy Wiseau shot a pilot for a new TV series called ''The Neighbors'' in 2007. Wiseau spent several years pitching the show to various networks until it finally premiered on Hulu in March 2015.
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* Haim Saban had been trying to get a network to pick up an Americanized version of ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' for ''years'', but no one had faith in the idea. He finally got his lucky break as the then president of Fox Kids had previously had tried to do the same thing before but failed. Thus ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' was created, and the rest is history.

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* [[Creator/SabanEntertainment Haim Saban had been Saban]] started trying to get a network to pick up an Americanized version of ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' for ''years'', in 1986 (making a pilot based on ''Series/ChoudenshiBioman''), but no one had faith in the idea. He finally got his lucky break in 1993 (changing the footage source to ''Series/KyoryuSentaiZyuranger''), as the then president of Fox Kids had previously had tried to do the same thing before but failed. Thus ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' was created, and the rest is history.
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* A ''Series/CloakAndDagger'' series was announced alongside ''Jessica Jones'' (as well as unproduced ''[[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]]'' and ''ComicBook/{{Mockingbird}}'' shows) back in 2011. Like the aforementioned series, it spent a significant time in Development Hell before it was officially picked up by Creator/{{Freeform}} in 2016, and began airing in 2018.

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* A ''Series/CloakAndDagger'' ''Series/CloakAndDagger2018'' series was announced alongside ''Jessica Jones'' (as well as unproduced ''[[ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk Hulk]]'' and ''ComicBook/{{Mockingbird}}'' ''ComicBook/{{Mockingbird|MarvelComics}}'' shows) back in 2011. Like the aforementioned series, it spent a significant time in Development Hell before it was officially picked up by Creator/{{Freeform}} in 2016, and began airing in 2018.
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[[folder:Anime and Manga]]

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[[folder:Anime and & Manga]]
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* SavedFromDevelopmentHell/LiveActionFilms

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* SavedFromDevelopmentHell/LiveActionFilms[[SavedFromDevelopmentHell/LiveActionFilms Films — Live-Action]]
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Creating a subpage for Live-Action Films.

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* SavedFromDevelopmentHell/LiveActionFilms

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!!Examples:

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!!Examples:!!Example subpages:



!!Other examples:






[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'', the LiveActionAdaptation of ''Manga/BattleAngelAlita'' by director Creator/JamesCameron. On again and off again with rumors as far back as the early 2000s including supposed casting calls for a little girl who could move like a cat ... then nothing. Then he said he was waiting for the technology to catch up to his vision. Then ''Film/{{Avatar}}''. WordOfGod has stated that after he was done with ''Film/{{Avatar}}'' he ''still'' did not believe the technology was ready yet. After multiple delays and Cameron being way too busy with the Avatar Sequels, he officially passed the project off to Creator/RobertRodriguez to direct (with Cameron still producing). Creator/RosaSalazar has been cast in the title role (beating out Maika Monroe and Creator/{{Zendaya}}), and Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox began negotiating the budget down from the $170-200 million range before they could officially green-light the film. The film was finally released on February 14, 2019.
* The fourth ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'' film went through this later on, to the point where Columbia and director Creator/SamRaimi ended up canceling the project altogether in early 2010, with Raimi announcing that he could not meet the May 2011 release date. At the same time, Columbia announced a reboot was to begin development shortly, and ''Film/TheAmazingSpiderMan'' was released in July 2012.
* Two adaptations of Creator/AndrewLloydWebber, ''Film/{{Evita}}'' (which Creator/AlanParker even thought about making in the 1970s before ''Film/{{Fame}}'', only to take the project in the 90s after Creator/OliverStone left) and ''Film/{{Cats}}'' (which almost became an animated film in the 90s before hitting theaters in 2019).
* ''Film/ApocalypseNow''. In the documentary ''Film/HeartsOfDarknessAFilmmakersApocalypse'', which chronicles the TroubledProduction, it's mentioned that Creator/OrsonWelles planned to adapt Creator/JosephConrad's ''Literature/HeartOfDarkness'' in 1939, but it was abandoned in pre-production (Welles made ''Film/CitizenKane'' instead). Creator/FrancisFordCoppola started planning ''Apocalypse Now'' in 1969, the idea being to film it in Vietnam. Unsurprisingly, the studio thought it was too dangerous, what with UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar still going on at the time. The plans were revived in 1975 following Coppola's successes ''Film/TheGodfather'' and ''Film/TheGodfatherPartII''. The movie was released in 1979, ten years after Coppola conceived of it and forty years after Welles' initial plans to adapt the novel.
* Plans for [[Film/ArtemisFowl the film adaptation]] of ''Literature/ArtemisFowl'' were announced as early as 2001, but nothing came of them until 2013 when the film rights passed to Disney. The film release was announced in 2017 to be scheduled for August 2019. Despite this, the release still became an issue, as it was moved to and pulled from a theatrical May 2020 release date to a digital release on June 12, 2020.
* An adaptation of ''Literature/TheArtOfRacingInTheRain'' was in development at Creator/{{Universal}} in 2009, but was put in turnaround after they couldn't find a director. The project later moved to Creator/{{Disney}} in 2016 with Neal H. Mortiz producing, but it also didn't go anywhere at the studio. A year later, Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox (who would later get acquired by Disney during production) picked it up with Mortiz remaining on board; filming began on May 2018, and it's set to be released on September 2019.
* It took over a decade for ''Series/TheATeam'' [[Film/TheATeam film]] to be made, and the movie went through 11 scripts. In the first script, the team members were supposed to be veterans of the ''First'' Iraq War!
* The film adaptation of ''Film/AtlasShrugged''. There were two failed attempts in TheSeventies to turn it into a MiniSeries -- the first one fell through when Creator/AynRand wasn't able to secure final script approval, while the second one had a finished script (with Rand's approval) written by Stirling Silliphant (writer of ''Film/InTheHeatOfTheNight'', ''Series/{{Route 66}}'', ''[[Film/VillageOfTheDamned1960 Village of the Damned]]'', ''Film/ThePoseidonAdventure'', and ''Film/TheToweringInferno'') and was gearing up for production at Creator/{{NBC}}, but that too was halted after Fred Silverman came to power at the network. Rand started work on her own script, but [[DiedDuringProduction she died]] with only a third of it finished. The film rights switched hands multiple times in the ensuing decades, and at one point such stars as Creator/AngelinaJolie, Creator/BradPitt, Creator/CharlizeTheron, Creator/JuliaRoberts, Creator/AnneHathaway, and Creator/RussellCrowe were all attached. All of their deals, however, fell through, and the current rights-holders rushed through an independently-financed production [[AshcanCopy in order to prevent the film rights from reverting to the Rand estate]]. The result, released in 2011 as ''Atlas Shrugged: Part I'', was critically thrashed and went largely ignored even by the conservatives and libertarians that its marketing aggressively courted. Still, the filmmakers managed to get the second and third parts of the trilogy out the door in 2012 and 2014, albeit with [[NoBudget even smaller budgets]] (the third film was made for just $5 million) and [[TheOtherDarrin recast actors]] in every film.
* Creator/JamesCameron wrote the script for ''Film/{{Avatar}}'' in 1994, and planned for a 1999 release. It took ten years for technology to advance to the point where he could convincingly and reasonably depict another planet with CGI. [[SceneryPorn He succeeded.]] Since it was already written at the time, he even snuck [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OC-OTMFJm2Q a reference to Avatar]] into ''Film/{{Titanic 1997}}''.
* ''Film/AVPAlienVsPredator'' is probably the most famous film case of development hell. It was finally released in 2004 after more than a decade of different scripts, changes to the cast, false starts, orphaned tie-ins, several series of video games, and even promotions of the believed-to-be-coming-soon movie.
* The whole idea for there to be a Batman movie [[Film/BatmanTheMovie that wasn't inspired by the TV series]] was first announced in July 1980, and Tom Mankiewicz wrote a script, titled ''The Batman'', in 1983. Numerous actors were considered for the part of Bruce Wayne/Batman, and several rewrites were done by as many as ''nine'' different writers before Creator/TimBurton latched onto the project in 1986. After several film treatments, Sam Hamm wrote an almost entirely new script, Creator/MichaelKeaton was cast in the title role, and overall three years would pass before ''Film/{{Batman|1989}}'' was finally released in 1989. Three sequels later, the failure of ''Film/BatmanAndRobin'' caused many projects for a fifth Franchise/{{Batman}} movie to not take off (including a full-fledged sequel, an adaptation of ''ComicBook/BatmanYearOne'', and a ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'' film) until [[Film/BatmanBegins a new one]] debuted eight years later.
* Creator/PeterSellers read ''Film/BeingThere'' circa 1972 and immediately visualized a film adaptation he could play the lead role of Chance the Gardener in; it didn't come to pass until 1979 (he had to rebuild his box-office clout, for one thing).
* ''Film/TheBelkoExperiment'' was a script written by Creator/JamesGunn in 2007 (inspired by [[BasedOnADream a nightmare he had]] about being locked in an office where all the employees were forced to kill one another), but while the film was greenlit the following year, with plans of it being shot in Brazil, Gunn decided to put the project on hold as he ended up going through a divorce and wanted to be around family, with the movie's premise being something he ''really'' didn't want to have to focus on for many additional months of his life. He later admitted he'd "kind of forgotten about it", and it wasn't until he finished ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxy2014'' and received a phone call from [[Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer MGM]] where he was prompted on still doing the film. Production finally began in 2015, and while he had to sit out the director's chair due to other obligations ([=Greg McLean=] took his place), Gunn stayed on board as producer.
* The film version of the Creator/DaveBarry novel ''Literature/BigTrouble'' had been filmed, had a star-studded cast and was looking to be a big box-office hit...and then September 11 happened a week before the film was to be released. Being a comedy about a plane hijacking with a subplot about two teenagers playing a large-scale tag game called "Killer", the movie was shelved indefinitely. It finally appeared in theaters with little promotion in April 2002. Despite decent reviews, it failed spectacularly at the box office.
* Creator/KeanuReeves and Alex Winter spent years saying that they were eager and willing to make a third ''Film/BillAndTed'' film. A screenplay was completed and gone through several rounds of rewrites, and there was a production company willing to front at least part of the budget. Unfortunately, none of these were with the company that owns the actual rights to the franchise and everything kept hitting a roadblock over who pays for what and gets how much of the resulting pie. Fortunately, it was announced on May 8, 2018 that [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/cannes-keanu-reeves-alex-winter-reteaming-bill-ted-3-1107419 the third film is now in production for real]], although a release date wasn't announced at the time. [[https://consequenceofsound.net/2019/03/bill-ted-3-release-date/ On March 20, 2019]], Reeves and Winter announced that production had started and that the film, later titled ''Film/BillAndTedFaceTheMusic'', was released in August 2020.
* After the success of the British film adaptation that was released in 1949, several Hollywood studios were interested in Henry De Vere Stacpoole's best-selling novel ''Literature/TheBlueLagoon''. The first attempt to adapt the novel into a major motion picture by a Hollywood studio was in 1955 when the rights were optioned by Creator/WarnerBros, and the project was announced the following year as part of a three-picture deal for Tab Hunter and Creator/NatalieWood, with Creator/RaoulWalsh to direct, however, Hunter's agent turned down the project and was quietly shelved. Creator/ColumbiaPictures purchased the rights to the novel from Warner Bros. in 1971, not long after the success of ''Film/LoveStory'', went through many iterations, and the [[Film/TheBlueLagoon finished product]] was released to theaters in the summer of 1980.
* Creator/WarrenBeatty spent most of the 1960s trying to make ''Film/BonnieAndClyde'', even pitching the idea to UsefulNotes/FrenchNewWave directors Creator/FrancoisTruffaut and Creator/JeanLucGodard.
** Beatty also planned a Creator/HowardHughes biopic after seeing him in a hotel lobby in the early 1970s and being fascinated by him. Initially planned as a companion piece to ''Film/{{Reds|1981}}'', it was finally made as ''Rules Don't Apply'' in 2016.
* ''Film/TheBoondockSaintsIIAllSaintsDay''. The original came out in 1999, and by 2002 had finally received backing for a sequel. Planned for release in 2005, the film didn't come out until 2009, ten years after the original.
* The film of Creator/RichardMatheson's short story ''Button, Button'' became the ''Chinese Democracy'' of the film world during its nearly four decades in development hell (though it saw a [=TV=] adaptation for ''Series/TheTwilightZone1985'' in the meantime). It would eventually be released in 2010 as ''Film/TheBox''.
* James Clavell's ''Tai-Pan'' and James A. Michener's ''Caravans'' had their film rights bought up by Creator/{{MGM}}, with the 1967 promotional short "Lionpower from MGM" announcing both as future projects. [[UsefulNotes/FallOfTheStudioSystem But MGM was falling apart]] and ultimately both books reached the screen through other means. ''Caravans'' arrived in 1978 via Creator/{{Universal}}, and ''Tai-Pan'' in 1986 through De Laurentis Entertainment Group.
* A ''Film/CatsAndDogs'' sequel was intended for release in 2005. After some story rewrites, it was finally released in 2010.
* ''Film/ChaosWalking2021''. Lionsgate bought the movie rights back in 2011 and the first draft of the screenplay was written in 2012. Nothing else came of it until 2016 when Doug Liman was announced as director; principal production finally began in 2017. That wasn't the end of the film's [[TroubledProduction troubles]], though, as it got delayed again for reshoots. It has ''finally'' gotten a release date for early 2021.
* It was also around the TurnOfTheMillennium that the prospect of a new adaptation of ''Literature/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'' began development in earnest, going through several potential directors (Gary Ross, Creator/MartinScorsese) and a gigantic list of potential Willy Wonkas (Creator/WillSmith, Creator/RobinWilliams, Creator/NicolasCage, Music/MarilynManson, etc.) before settling on Creator/TimBurton as director and from there Creator/JohnnyDepp as Wonka.
* The Brazilian film ''Chatô'' had a long process that started in 1994, with Guilherme Fontes acquiring the film rights to the acclaimed novel (a biography of media mogul [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assis_Chateaubriand Assis Chateaubriand]], who introduced TV to the country), then production started in 1995 with help from none other than Francis Ford Coppola with him promising the press that it would be the greatest film in Brazilian history. Principal photography started in 1998 and then suddenly stopped the next year. That was when the government of Brazil started an investigation which ended with Fontes and the production company being jailed for improper use of funds, as most of the budget came from the Ministry of Culture, and failure to deliver a film project. They were then sentenced to 3 years in prison (later changed to community service) and had multiple court hearings condemning them to return the money used for the film. And then in November 2015, after years of failed promises and controversies, the film was released. It received decent reviews, but barely got distributed - possibly due to being OvershadowedByControversy.
* Creator/CarlSagan wrote the 100-page film script for ''Film/{{Contact}}'' in 1985. When it went to DevelopmentHell, he just [[{{Novelization}} made a book out of it]]. The film was finally released in 1997.
* For ''Film/CryMacho'', N. Richard Nash's original script got repeatedly rejected by several big studios since 1975. He died in 2000, and it took twenty-one more years for it to be adapted, when Creator/ClintEastwood got the gig.
* The production of ''Film/DangerousMen'' began in 1984, and was continuously worked on until its limited release in 2005.
* The truly bizarre story of ''Dark Blood'': The movie was, by director George Sluizer's estimation, "80 percent finished" when shooting wrapped up for the night on October 30, 1993, the night that the film's star, Creator/RiverPhoenix, died of a drug overdose. Much of what was left to be filmed consisted of interior shots requiring close-ups of Phoenix's character, so the filmmakers and the insurance company were left to conclude that there was no cost-efficient way to salvage the movie, at which point the investors were paid out and ownership of the movie transferred to the insurers themselves. In 1999, no longer willing to pay to warehouse the film, the insurance company was set to destroy it, but Sluizer [[NoodleIncident somehow]] rescued the footage. Flash forward to Christmas Day, 2007. Sluizer collapses suddenly while vacationing in the French Alps and was evacuated to a local hospital, then driven five '''hours''' to a cardiovascular hospital to be treated for...an acute aortic dissection, which normally kills a person within five '''minutes'''. While he's recovering, he comes to the decision that he has to complete this movie, and starts soliciting donations on what amounts to the Dutch equivalent of Website/{{Kickstarter}}. Ultimately, the decision was made to fill in the narrative gaps using a voiceover, with Sluizer considering using an actor but eventually deciding to do it himself. The film premiered at the Netherlands Film Festival on September 27, 2012--nearly ''nineteen years'' after the death of its star.
* Franchise/DCExtendedUniverse:
** Plans for a ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' movie have been in various stages of production since the 1990s, with creators ranging from David E. Kelley to Creator/JossWhedon attached at various points. In October 2014, WB finally announced that [[Film/WonderWoman2017 a Wonder Woman movie]] was in the works, which opened to great success in 2017. Additionally, the character first made her film debut in 2016's ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'', portrayed by Creator/GalGadot.
** The previously planned ''Franchise/JusticeLeague'' film (a serious case of WhatCouldHaveBeen) petered out after a year in development. In 2007, pre-production got underway, with many major names attached to star in the film (including Creator/AdamBrody as The Flash, Music/{{Common}} as Franchise/GreenLantern John Stewart, and Creator/MichaelGough as Alfred [reprising his role from the Film/BatmanFilmSeries). Numerous problems happened during pre-production (the film's costume designer passed away, a Hollywood writer's strike derailed the script development and there were rumors that director Creator/GeorgeMiller had been canned from the project). Finally, the film was delayed less than ''a month'' before it began shooting and become effectively moribund. Then, with the success of the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse, specifically ''Film/{{The Avengers|2012}}'', the studio began again to make the film happen, with [[http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Justice-League-Movie-What-We-Know-So-Far-32429.html 2013 rumors]] of releasing ''Film/ManOfSteel'' first leading into an ''Avengers''-like team-up of Franchise/{{Batman}}, Franchise/GreenLantern, Franchise/WonderWoman and Franchise/TheFlash. Then, the ''Man of Steel'' sequel, ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'' was made as a BackdoorPilot to ''Film/{{Justice League|2017}}'' (to the point its subtitle is "Dawn of Justice"). The Justice League film was then released in 2017, after a TroubledProduction that led to Joss Whedon taking over directing duties from Zack Snyder (from both ''Man of Steel'' and the sequel) to retool the movie. It resulted in mixed-to-negative reviews. Due to [[SendingStuffToSaveTheShow fan pressure]], a version of the film that adhered closer to what Snyder and screenwriter Creator/ChrisTerrio intended, ''Film/ZackSnydersJusticeLeague'', was eventually released in 2021, and was much better received.
** Wrestling/DwayneJohnson was cast as Film/{{Black Adam|2022}} as far back as ''2007''. He never gave up on the film project and it ended up being made in 2021.
* ''Film/{{Dead Air|2009}}'', which had been pushed back twice. It eventually got released.
* The ''Series/{{Deadwood}}'' movie finally came out after over a decade of on-again-off-again news about its production. Apparently, trying to round up all the actors of the ensemble cast and aligning their schedules was an enormous challenge for David Milch and HBO.
* The American adaptation of ''Manga/DeathNote''. It was announced by Creator/WarnerBros in 2008 after a huge bidding war and said to be released in 2011 (with a rumor around that the protagonist would be played by Creator/ZacEfron). Creator/ShaneBlack had been announced as the director, but he left the project in July 2014, citing CreativeDifferences (read: he wanted to stay more faithful to the manga; the studio wanted to [[ExecutiveMeddling change everything]]). Gus Van Saint was rumored to be directing, but the currently attached director is Adam Wingard (''Film/GodzillaVsKong''). Nat Wolff and Margaret Qualley were cast in roles for the film, and production was moving along smoothly until Warner canceled the project in their decision to release fewer films per year following the disappointing numbers of ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice''. However, they allowed Wingard to shop the project elsewhere, and Creator/{{Netflix}} picked up the rights, with Keith Stanfield, Paul Nakauchi, and Shea Whigham joining the cast and Jeremy Slater writing the script. Filming officially began in Vancouver on June 30, 2016 for a 2017 release.
* Although it eventually got a 2005 release in the wake of ''VideoGame/Doom3'', the ''Film/{{Doom}}'' movie first began its life as a rumor shortly after the runaway success of the [[VideoGame/{{Doom}} first game]], and then a flurry of studio developments, press releases and wild fan rumors after ''Doom 2'' proved even more successful. At one point, [[WhatCouldHaveBeen according to the stories]], Creator/TerryGilliam was interested in directing, and Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger would have starred as the space marine, but then it sank back into development hell for another decade.
* A ''WesternAnimation/DoraTheExplorer'' movie [[http://www.ign.com/articles/2012/08/17/the-legend-of-korra-the-movie was announced in 2012,]] but nothing came of it until 2017 when it was announced that [[https://www.cinemablend.com/news/1717131/dora-the-explore-is-getting-her-own-movie-and-yes-michael-bay-is-involved Michael Bay]] would be working on it. That film became ''Film/DoraAndTheLostCityOfGold''.
* The 2014 film ''Film/DraculaUntold'' has been tossed around in one form or another since 2007. Initially called Dracula Year Zero, Sam Worthington was set to star before development hell set in and the film restarted under a new name with a new lead. Alex Proyas, director of ''Film/TheCrow'', was originally lined up as director.
* A live-action ''Manga/DragonBall'' movie was announced in 2002, but didn't get out until 2009 as ''Film/DragonballEvolution''.
* ''Film/EndersGame'' was written in 1985, and author Orson Scott Card started writing the screenplay for the movie in 1996. The film was finally released in November 2013. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ender%27s_Game_%28film%29#Development Here]] are more details of its very long development.
* The 2012 movie ''Film/{{Dredd}}'' became an AcclaimedFlop, so plans for sequels were shelved despite many of the creators repeatedly asserting that they wanted to do a continuation and were "in talks" with various studios. Eventually a [[RecycledTheSeries spinoff series]], titled ''Judge Dredd: Mega-City One'', was greenlit in 2017 as an in-house production by Rebellion.
* In a unique example of development hell continuing into post-production, the film ''Film/ExorcistTheBeginning'' had completed filming and was having some final SFX work done when the studio fired Creator/PaulSchrader and replaced him with Creator/RennyHarlin, who recast almost all of the supporting characters, changed the context of the scenes he didn't have reshot, and completely rewrote the film's climax. After Harlin's film bombed, Schrader was allowed to finish his version with a ''very'' limited special effects budget, and it received a theatrical release under the title ''[[Film/TheExorcist Dominion: Prequel To The Exorcist]]'', and did a ''little'' better critically (due to a limited release, the gross was even shorter).
* The ''Film/{{Fantastic Four|2015}}'' reboot was announced by Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox in 2009, but the film languished in limbo until a cast and director were finally chosen in 2014, and it was released in 2015. [[HereWeGoAgain Unfortunately, it was a critical and financial failure, so now, another reboot is being planned...]] [[ChannelHop but by]] Creator/MarvelStudios, thanks to Fox's purchase.
* ''Film/TheFighter'' was in limbo for four years. Creator/MarkWahlberg began training (boxing) for the role in 2005. Throughout the various production delays, Wahlberg continued to train every day so that he could be ready for filming. Filming finally began in July 2009.
* ''Literature/FirstBlood'' got Hollywood's attention upon release, but Warner Bros. repeatedly couldn't adapt it, having gone through 13 different screenplays and various possible stars across 8 years before selling the rights to Mario Kassar and Andrew Vajna. Both brought in Creator/SylvesterStallone, the big name attracted investors, and [[Film/FirstBlood the adaptation]] finally came out in 1982, eventually starting the successful ''Franchise/{{Rambo}}'' franchise.
* A ''Film/{{Footloose}}'' remake was first announced in 2007, with Kenny Ortega as the director and Creator/ZacEfron as Ren. Early reports indicated that it was to be [[RecursiveAdaptation an adaptation of the stage musical]]. Both Ortega and Efron dropped out in 2009, the former due to disagreements with Paramount over the budget and the latter due to Efron not wanting to be typecast in [[Film/HighSchoolMusical musicals]]. Then Efron's replacement, Chase Crawford, backed out due to scheduling conflicts. It finally got to theaters in October 2011, now a straightforward remake rather than a musical.
* ''Film/FreddyVsJason'':
** If ''AVP'' is the most famous case, this is likely the second most famous, as the film was also famously mired in development hell for years; originally, the studios who owned the [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet two]] [[Franchise/FridayThe13th franchises]] involved with the titular crossover had wanted to make it for years, but could never agree on how to make it (each studio wanted to license out the other's character and do the film their way). When New Line Cinema bought the rights to the ''Friday the 13th'' franchise, the film stayed in development hell as New Line went through numerous screenwriters and even more script ideas...until the two men who ended up writing the script for the film threw out every other script that came before them and set a list of rules to follow that respected both parent franchises involved as they wrote their script. The film was ''finally'' released in 2003, and ended up making more money than any other film in either of the parent franchises.
** The story of the film's stay in Development Hell--and the numerous script ideas that came before the final script--is a bonus feature on the movie's DVD.
* There was talk around 2008-9 of a live-action remake of ''Anime/GhostInTheShell1995'', possibly produced or even directed by Creator/StevenSpielberg, but he seems to have passed on it in favor of other projects. It finally got a director, writer, and production team in 2014 with Dreamworks distributing (Paramount overseas) and Creator/ScarlettJohansson and Creator/PilouAsbaek attached to star. It officially began filming in early 2016 and [[Film/GhostInTheShell2017 released in 2017]].
* ''Franchise/{{Ghostbusters}} 3''. The story behind the third film is as strange as it gets. Rumors of multiple scripts and new Ghostbuster cast members have floated around the internet for years. To give you some perspective as to how long this was going on, ''Creator/ChrisFarley'' was being considered as a supporting character back in the '90s. Creator/DanAykroyd has reportedly written several scripts over the years, all of which failed to ignite enough interest to start pre-production. At one point, there was apparently a script written where the original team journeyed to a hellish AlternateUniverse UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity called "[=ManHellton=]" (which, in turn, prompted the Russian video game studio [=ZootFly=] to produce a ''VideoGame/GearsOfWar''-esque [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rM4cuKgGNvg tech demo]] based on this proposed script in the late '00s). This, in turn, spurred the development and eventual release of ''VideoGame/GhostbustersTheVideoGame'', which (according to Aykroyd) may as well be the canonical third film.\\
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And yet, script and cast rumors still continued to float around -- Creator/BenStiller, Bill Hader, and Creator/ElizaDushku have all been rumored to be potential replacement candidates. In January 2010, Ivan Reitman announced he was directing the film, and Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky (''Series/TheOfficeUS'') reportedly wrote a script with Aykroyd and co-creator/co-star Creator/HaroldRamis, that all were very happy with. Yet, still there was no word for years on the status of development. A major part of the delay seemed to involve Creator/BillMurray -- as of [[http://screenrant.com/ghostbusters-3-bill-murray-2-aco-99337/ early 2011]], it appeared the production was only waiting on Murray to approve the script before they moved forward with pre-production. The film was slated to start production in 2012, but that year came and went with no news other than the report that new writers were hired to craft yet another script, as well as more back-and-forth on whether Murray would return. Then Reitman began talking about the possibility of a [[ContinuityReboot remake]] for a while, before Aykroyd shifted attention back to the third film in March 2013, in an interview on Canadian television (for a charity project he was doing), saying they have a script (penned by Etan Cohen), they are planning to begin production in fall 2013, and Bill Murray will ''not'' be a part of it at all... more or less, what he'd been saying for the past three years. Fall 2013 came and went with very little new news from Aykroyd -- the script was being rewritten ''again'', and this time actors Jonah Hill and Emma Stone were being considered as part of the "new" team of Ghostbusters being brought in alongside the older generation (minus Murray). Then Harold Ramis died in February 2014.\\
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Then in Late July 2014, Aykroyd was on Creator/{{NBC}}'s ''Series/{{Today}}'' and again claimed that production would begin in Spring 2015, though he was cryptic about it and said it was uncertain who would be involved with it. So, doubt still remained when the development hell would end.''' And then''', it was reported that director Paul Feig was [[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/08/02/paul-feig-ghostbusters_n_5644486.html in talks]] to direct a ContinuityReboot, starring a [[DistaffCounterpart female crew of Busters]]. This ''Film/{{Ghostbusters|2016}}'' began filming in June of 2015 and was released in July of 2016.\\
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That film, however, ended up getting a poor response and [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/ghostbusters-box-office-loss-sequel-unlikely-918515 flopped at the box office]], which pretty much ended the rebooted franchise. In 2019, it was announced that [[https://ew.com/movies/2019/01/15/new-ghostbusters-movie-jason-reitman/ Jason Reitman was developing a film that would be a sequel to the first two films]], titled ''Film/GhostbustersAfterlife''. Basically, the film that fans had been wanting for decades, a sequel to the original films, was finally coming into fruition.
* The first American ''Film/{{Godzilla|1998}}'' movie was first suggested way back in the 1970s. Of course, due to things like budget, rejected scripts, and the like, it wasn't until 1998 that the movie was finally released.
* R.L. Stine's ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' books made a [[Series/{{Goosebumps}} successful '90s TV series]], but there were also numerous attempts to adapt them into a feature film long before the 2015 version. As far back as 1998, Creator/TimBurton was tapped to produce a big-screen adaptation that never materialized, partly due to financial turmoil at Twentieth Century Fox, the cancellation of Creator/FoxKids (which produced the series), and the books' loss of popularity. In 2008, after the ''Horrorland'' revival series, Columbia Pictures announced a new ''Goosebumps'' movie, but the movie was sent to development hell, with various producers and writers attached at different times. Then in fall 2013, Creator/JackBlack became attached to star as an AuthorAvatar of Stine. Principal photography officially began in April 2014 and completed in July 2014; ''Film/{{Goosebumps|2015}}'' was released to theaters in October 2015.
* ''Film/TheGodfatherPartIII'' went into development shortly after ''Part II'''s release in 1974. Unfortunately for Paramount, neither Creator/FrancisFordCoppola nor his cast showed any interest in continuing the franchise, which didn't stop the studio from trying. [[http://articles.latimes.com/1990-12-25/entertainment/ca-7119_1_godfather-iii This LA Times article]] details some of the many prospective stories mooted during the '70s and '80s: depending on the script, the Corleone family becomes involved with the CIA, South American drug lords, African-American gangsters and/or Third World dictators; a few were InNameOnly sequels focusing on Michael's son or [[RememberTheNewGuy long-lost relatives]]. One script written by Thomas Lee Wright was even retooled into ''Film/NewJackCity''. Finally, in the late '80s Coppola and Mario Puzo agreed to revisit the series, mostly [[MoneyDearBoy due to financial woes]]. After sixteen years, ''Part III'' was released in 1990 to a decidedly mixed reception.
* ''Film/GrownUps'' was supposed to be made in the late 90s, and starring Creator/AdamSandler, Creator/ChrisRock, Creator/ChrisFarley, Creator/DavidSpade, and Rob Schneider, who were all known as "The Bad Boys of [[Series/SaturdayNightLive SNL]]" in the early 90s. However, after Farley's death in 1997, it got put away before it was finally made in 2010 with [[SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute Kevin James]] in the role meant for Farley.
* In 2007, Platinum Dunes announced the GroundhogDayLoop horror film ''Half to Death'', which they eventually ditched after rewrites. Nearly a decade later, the guy responsible for the rewrites was reminded of the film by the original producer, gave his script to Blumhouse (he worked there in the ''Film/ParanormalActivity'' sequels) and it was greenlit, eventually being released as ''Film/HappyDeathDay'' in 2017.
* The remake of ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}''. Mostly due to the fact that [[ExecutiveMeddling the Weinsteins]] keep rejecting the ideas of every writer and director that has ever been attached to the project. One of the projects was turned into [[Film/HellraiserRevelations a sequel]] so that the company can [[AshcanCopy keep their hold]] on [[Franchise/{{Hellraiser}} the franchise]], returning the remake into development hell. [[Film/Hellraiser2022 In 2022]], the remake was ''finally'' released.
* One of the earliest examples of this was Creator/HowardHughes' ''Film/HellsAngels'', which, due to Hughes' perfectionism and insistence on the latest film technology, took three years and a budget of $3.8 million to create, something unheard of at the time (and equaling somewhere on the order of $225 million in today's money). Two decades later, Hughes would take ''seven'' years to complete a similar film, ''Jet Pilot''.
* ''Film/HighlanderTheSource'' stalled for several years and went through several writers and numerous script rewrites before the final project was made. Fans hoped it would improve the thing, but it was still terrible.
* ''Film/{{The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy|2005}}'' was announced in 1982, but filming did not begin until 2003, two years after series creator Creator/DouglasAdams died from a sudden heart attack. Adams said of his experience trying to get the film made, "Getting a movie made in Hollywood is like trying to grill a steak by having a succession of people coming into the room and breathing on it." For several years, the About the Author blurb in Adams' books included the line (in the context of discussing the Hitchhiker's series) "A major motion picture is currently in development hell and should be coming out any decade now." This no doubt helped popularize the term.
* ''Film/TheHobbit'' had to resolve some serious legal issues before it could be green-lit, delaying production until 2009 despite the fact that Jackson had been seeking an adaptation since 1995. The film then suffered creative control problems -- such as the studio's refusal to film in New Zealand (the location for the LOTR films) -- which caused then-director Guillermo del Toro to leave the project. Fortunately, Peter Jackson managed to retake control as both director and producer and the first of three ''Hobbit'' films came out in December 2012.
* ''Film/{{Hounddog}}'' by D. Kampmeier. The script was originally written in the nineties, but the project hasn't found financing until 2005. When production started in summer 2006, it was overshadowed by [[PaedoHunt accusations of sexual exploitation of the child actors involved]]. The film was shown at the Sundance Festival in early 2007, booed and basically sent back into DevelopmentHell. It was finally ready in 2009 but was almost completely pulled from distribution at the last moment (only having 22 screens at most). It's been available on DVD since fall 2010.
* ''Film/{{Hulk}}'': Development began in the 1990s, but the film was not released until 2003.
* ''Film/{{Inception}}'':
** It went through a stint in development hell that was actually self-imposed; Creator/ChristopherNolan saw the film as his personal opus and spent ten years revising the script until he was sure it was the absolute best he could make it, and everything in the complicated story made sense.
** He was also waiting until he had enough clout in Hollywood to get the budget he wanted. After the success of ''Film/BatmanBegins'' and ''Film/TheDarkKnight'', he was essentially given a blank check to do what he wanted... that being "create a highly rated film that made everyone lots of money". Good things do sometimes come to those who wait.
* ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull''. It took a long time before Creator/GeorgeLucas, Creator/StevenSpielberg and Creator/HarrisonFord agreed on a script - and thus the TrilogyCreep came [[SequelGap 19 years]] after ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheLastCrusade'', with a fifth film scheduled for 2023.
* Creator/QuentinTarantino announced his plans to shoot a WWII movie titled ''Film/InglouriousBasterds'' shortly after the 1997 release of ''Film/JackieBrown''. As of 2007, he was still working on the script, but in late 2008 it began shooting and was released in August 2009.
* The adaptation of ''Theatre/InTheHeights'' started development at Universal in 2008 with Kenny Ortega as the director. But months before production would've started, the studio pulled the plug in spring 2011 due to budget concerns. In 2016, Creator/LinManuelMiranda announced that he would produce the film with Harvey Weinstein over at [[Creator/TheWeinsteinCompany his studio]] with Creator/JonMChu helming production. However, development again came to a halt a year later [[RoleEndingMisdemeanor when news reports came in about Weinstein's many sexual harassment allegations against him]] and the rights were given back to the other producers. Fortunately, by that point, Miranda became a huge star after the massive success of ''Theatre/{{Hamilton}}'' and his reputation got multiple studios interested in the project with Creator/WarnerBros winning the rights in a bidding war. Filming started in April 2019, and it arrived in June 2021.
* In the early Nineties there were talks of a film adaptation of the musical ''Theatre/IntoTheWoods'' by Columbia Pictures, where Creator/RobinWilliams would have played The Baker and Jim Henson Productions deal with the effects. It was eventually dropped by the studio by the end of the decade. Then in 2002, the success of ''Film/{{Chicago}}'' made Rob Marshall approach creator Music/StephenSondheim towards adapting one of his musicals, with Sondheim suggesting ''Into the Woods''. He accepted, but Marshall postponed the film until he finished ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanOnStrangerTides'' in 2011, leading him to pitch the project to that film's studio. Disney accepted in early 2012, filming begun in 2013, and ''Film/IntoTheWoods'' finally hit theaters at Christmas 2014.
* ''Film/JamesBond'':
** The biggest cases are ''Film/GoldenEye'' (which emerged from the failed third Creator/TimothyDalton film, the pre-production of which was derailed by legal issues between EON and MGM after the latter briefly came under the ownership of an Italian huckster, Giancarlo Parretti, who attempted to flog the international TV rights to the franchise at low prices without EON's permission; the six year gap is still the longest between installments[[note]]five months longer than the time until ''Film/NoTimeToDie'', which also owes to [[TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment over a year being delayed by the]] Usefulnotes/Covid19Pandemic[[/note]]) and ''Film/{{Skyfall}}'' (EON started to arrange things. Then MGM got into financial problems, and it was kept on hold until the studio solved them).
** ''Film/OnHerMajestysSecretService'' is a minor case: it was first announced as a successor to ''Film/{{Goldfinger}}'' (''Film/{{Thunderball}}'' came instead due to lawsuits and such), then after ''Thunderball'' (but the winter locations made producers prioritize ''Film/YouOnlyLiveTwice'').
** Creator/AlbertRBroccoli and Harry Saltzman intended to follow ''Film/YouOnlyLiveTwice'' with ''Film/TheManWithTheGoldenGun'' (as it was the most recent book published), inviting Creator/RogerMoore to the Bond role (as Creator/SeanConnery wanted out after YOLT). However, filming was planned in Cambodia, and the Samlaut Uprising made filming impractical, leading to the production being cancelled.
** ''Film/ForYourEyesOnly'' was supposed to be the next film after ''Film/TheSpyWhoLovedMe'', but due to the success of ''Franchise/StarWars'', [[FollowTheLeader EON wanted to ride the sci-fi wave]] and made ''Film/{{Moonraker}}'', instead.
* The film adaptation of Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs's ''Literature/JohnCarterOfMars'' series probably holds the record for the longest time a property has been in Development Hell before being released. Originally conceived as an animated film by Creator/BobClampett in 1931 (which would have made it the first-ever animated feature film), it was handed from company to company for decades. At various points in the 2000s, Creator/RobertRodriguez, Kerry Conran, Creator/JonFavreau, and Creator/BradBird had been attached to direct the project. In 2006, Disney acquired the rights after Paramount's attempt at filming it failed, Paramount having acquired the rights from [[Creator/TouchstonePictures Touchstone]] (a Disney label) in 2002. Actual filming began in January 2010, and was released in March of 2012 -- 81 years since the movie was first mooted and just in time for the 100th anniversary of the first published John Carter story (a DVD extra is even titled "A Century Into Making"). The {{Mockbuster}} version by Creator/TheAsylum actually came out a full three years before the ''official'' adaptation did. And because of an [[TaintedByThePreview abysmal US marketing campaign]] coupled with mediocre reviews, it was [[http://movies.yahoo.com/news/john-carter-loss-expected-200m-205152656.html a spectacular box office failure]]. Perhaps its time in Hell was warranted. The film's failure also gave the Burroughs estate the perfect excuse to [[http://www.latinopost.com/articles/9751/20141022/john-carter-2-movie-release-date-news-reboot-coming-disney-loses-property-rights.htm claim that they now have the movie rights and are planning a reboot]] (the franchise is actually in the public domain given it started in 1912, rendering any claims of exclusivity on the part of the Burroughs estate moot).
* A fourth ''Franchise/JurassicPark'' was initially intended to begin production in 2004 for a summer 2005 release, but soon entered development hell. The producers even considered pulling the plug once Creator/MichaelCrichton died in 2008. Then in 2011, Creator/StevenSpielberg confirmed the fourth movie was on the way, and in 2013 the eventual director of ''Film/JurassicWorld'' was hired. The film was eventually released in June 2015, being as much of a box office behemoth as the original.
* It took about ten years to Creator/AlexandreAstier to get the ''Series/{{Kaamelott}}'' [[TheMovie movie]] project off the ground. He faced a number of issues, including losing the rights (which he regained in 2015) and finding ways to finance it. In January 2019, a trilogy was eventually announced and the first film, ''Film/KaamelottPremierVolet'', was released in July 2021.
* ''Film/KickAss2'', originally subtitled ''Balls to the Wall''. The film was intended to be ready in time for a 2012 release but had been put on hold due director Matthew Vaughn being busy with other projects and star Aaron Johnson wanting to be closer to his family. Vaughn decided to only produce, ''Film/CryWolf'' director Jeff Wadlow took over, and the film was released in August 2013.
* A live-action adaptation of ''Anime/KikisDeliveryService'' has been rumored since (according to IMDB) 2005. In April 2013, it was announced that Creator/TakashiShimizu (the known director of Film/JuOn) will direct it, and rather than being a remake of the Creator/StudioGhibli movie, it's a more direct adaptation of the illustrated novel by Eiko Kadono. The Japanese release occurred in March 2014.
* An adaptation of the 1997 novel ''The Moon and the Sun'' starring Creator/PierceBrosnan, Kaya Scodelario, and Benjamin Walker had its principal photography held in April and May 2014 and was announced by Paramount to release on April 10, 2015. However, three weeks before its wide release, Paramount canceled it, supposedly due to the film needing more time in post-production for its special effects. After being renamed in 2020 to ''The King's Daughter'', its distribution rights were picked up by Arclight Films, but it changed hands again in October the following year to Gravitas Ventures. ''The King's Daughter'' was finally released on January 21, 2022, to disappointing critical and box office reception, making only $750,000 during its opening weekend.
* The remake of ''Film/LastHoliday'' was originally intended to be made in 1985 with Creator/JohnCandy set to star. However, the project got put on the back burner and after Candy's passing, the role was rewritten to be a female (played by Queen Latifah). The film was finally made and released in 2006.
* After ''Film/LeprechaunBack2ThaHood'' (2003), treatments were written for ideas with the Leprechaun encountering spring breakers or pirates, even a WildWest setting. Though star Warwick Davis and director Brian Trenchard-Smith were keen on another installment, Lionsgate dragged their feet for years. Instead of making a direct follow-up, Lionsgate ultimately produced ''Film/LeprechaunOrigins'' in 2014, a DarkerAndEdgier franchise reboot starring Dylan Postl (Wrestling/{{WWE}}'s Wrestling/{{Hornswoggle}}), without the involvement of Davis or other members of the original franchise.
* It appeared at one point in time that ''Film/TheLoneRanger'' would never be made due to its budget coming in at well over $200 million, in part due to the poor performance of ''Film/CowboysAndAliens''. As late as fall 2011 Disney announced it had shelved the project, though production picked up again a few months later, and the film rode into theaters in 2013.
* The rights to a live-action adaptation of ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' were sold to United Artists shortly before Creator/JRRTolkien's death in 1973. Although scripts were intermittently under development and two animated adaptations made it to the screen despite their own [[DevelopmentHell development hells]], the conventional wisdom was that the trilogy as written was unfilmable due to its sheer length and complexity. Studios were extremely reluctant to green-light scripts that would obligate them to more than one film. Even one-film scripts (adapted [[InNameOnly almost beyond recognition]]) came with 3-hour running times, well beyond what [[ExecutiveMeddling studios believed]] moviegoers would be willing to sit through. It wasn't until 1994 that Miramax gave Creator/PeterJackson permission to move forward on a 5-hour, 2-movie script. By 1999, with shooting not even started, the studio had lost confidence and Jackson had to shop the script around again. New Line not only picked it up but also approved the third film, bringing the total running time to 7 hours. Jackson and his writing team, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens had to completely revamp the script ''during shooting'' to meet the new parameters. [[note]]In the directors' commentary track and making-of documentary footage from the Extended Edition DVD releases, Jackson and the writers point out several plot elements (such as Arwen rescuing Frodo at the Ford) that were originally created to get around time constraints but were retained for other purposes (such as increasing the prominence of female characters) or that might have eventually been removed if they hadn't run out of time for rewrites.[[/note]] [[Film/TheLordOfTheRings The first film]] was not released until 2001, 28 years after the film rights were sold...but finally redeemed ''Lord of the Rings'' from Development Hell with blockbuster success.
* ''Film/MadMaxFuryRoad'' was in development hell for almost a couple of '''decades'''. It was preparing to start filming in 2001 when the September 11th attacks made it unfeasible for the production crew to travel to Australia. By then, Creator/MelGibson lost interest in reprising the role and dropped out of production, which seemed to have made filming almost unlikely until reports in 2009 posited that it would be made without Gibson's involvement. The title role was recast (Creator/TomHardy replaced Mel Gibson) and started filming in July 2012, where principal photography rolled in Namibia. Filming wrapped up in December of that year and spent almost three years in post-production before it was finally completed in time for a May 15, 2015 release. Critical and public reaction was almost unanimous in praise, and as a result the ''Film/MadMax'' franchise was successfully rebooted and a fifth film began production almost immediately after ''Fury Road''[='=]s success. Though said sequel is unfortunately in a DevelopmentHell of its own, owing to creative dramas and the decision to split the movie into two, one focusing on Max and the other on Furiosa (the latter is currently on track for a 2023 release).
* ''Film/TheManWhoKilledDonQuixote'' by Creator/TerryGilliam has been trapped in DevelopmentHell for over two decades coupled with a TroubledProduction in 2000. Gilliam eventually released a documentary about making the film (appropriately titled ''Lost in La Mancha''), but the original incarnation of the film itself was never completed. Pre-production resumed in 2009, but as of late 2010, the project was shelved again due to a collapse of funding.
** In 2014, Gilliam's seventh attempt at production was underway, this time with Creator/JohnHurt as Quixote and Jack O'Connell as Toby Grisoni, whose character travels back in time and replaces Sancho Panza. Filming was set to begin in January 2015, with the film being released in May 2016. Filming was suspended again in fall 2015 after John Hurt was diagnosed with early-stage pancreatic cancer and he was forced to leave the project. Hurt passed away in January 2017.
** After more delays, Gilliam was able to regain funding for ''Quixote'' in 2016 with Creator/AdamDriver and Creator/JonathanPryce taking over the lead roles of Toby and Quixote respectively. Principal photography finally restarted on March 2017 and wrapped up [[http://www.indiewire.com/2017/06/terry-gilliam-wraps-production-on-the-man-who-killed-don-quixote-1201836951/ on June 2017]], fulfilling Gilliam's desire to get his dream project off the ground. The film was released in 2018 from Creator/AmazonStudios.
* Creator/JohnHuston had wanted to make ''Film/TheManWhoWouldBeKing'' since the 1940s. The proposed stars went from Creator/ClarkGable and Creator/HumphreyBogart, to Creator/BurtLancaster and Creator/KirkDouglas, to Creator/RichardBurton and Creator/PeterOToole, to Creator/PaulNewman and Creator/RobertRedford, to finally, Creator/SeanConnery and Creator/MichaelCaine.
* When Creator/MartinScorsese is [[TheDeterminator determined]] to make a film he follows through, no matter how many decades or how many films he makes in-between, he will eventually make his passion projects:
** ''Film/TheLastTemptationOfChrist'' was first recommended by actress Barbara Hershey (who eventually played Mary Magdalene ''19 years later'') to Scorsese during the making of ''Film/BoxcarBertha''. Scorsese had always planned on making a film about Jesus, and initially, he even considered adapting Robert Graves' ''King Jesus'' before settling on Nikos Kazantzakis' unusual take. ''The Last Temptation'' actually entered pre-production in TheEighties with Creator/AidenQuinn as Jesus and Music/{{Sting}} in key roles but Paramount pulled off and canceled the film. Scorsese then made ''Film/AfterHours'' and followed with ''Film/TheColorOfMoney'' whose box-office success he parlayed, successfully, into getting ''The Last Temptation of Christ'' off the ground by the end of the decade.
** ''Film/GangsOfNewYork'' was planned since TheSeventies before finally entering production in the late 90s, releasing in 2002. A good deal of his DVDCommentary on the film is devoted to explaining the arduous process. Scorsese's initial plans were considered radical and ambitious. In the 70s, he planned to make it a collaboration with Music/TheClash, making it a punk musical starring Creator/MalcolmMcDowell and Creator/RobertDeNiro. In TheNineties, he considered making it a trilogy. He also stated that it was his hope that the film launch a new genre, a 19th Century Urban Western, with many films set in nascent conurbations, but it didn't quite take off as he expected.
** ''Film/{{Silence}}'' his adaptation of Shusaku Endo's novel was planned since TheNineties (after ''Film/CapeFear'') and entered production in 2015 and set for a 2016 release. The film was always regarded as "uncommercial" and Scorsese has hinted in interviews that several films made in TheNoughties were essentially MoneyDearBoy projects to finally give him the cash to make ''Silence''. It was planned to be produced after ''Film/TheDeparted'' with Creator/BenicioDelToro and Creator/DanielDayLewis but finally had Creator/AndrewGarfield, Creator/AdamDriver and Creator/LiamNeeson take over.
** Scorsese and Music/MickJagger had talked about making ''The Long Play'' in TheNineties, a movie about the music business, its ups and downs. Eventually, the ideas behind it got repurposed for Creator/{{HBO}} and it became ''Series/{{Vinyl}}'', which has been canceled after one season.
** ''Film/TheIrishman'' was rejected by theatrical studios for a long time due to its humoungous cost (its DigitalDeaging technology in particular) and niche market prospects. Creator/{{Netflix}} ended up financing it.
* Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse:
** An ''ComicBook/IronMan'' film adaptation was in development since 1990 when Universal Studios bought the rights. The film then went through several changes in studios, writers and directors for more than a decade until 2005 when Marvel Studios reacquired the rights and put the film in production as their first independent feature. The [[Film/IronMan1 film]] finally released on May 2, 2008, to great success.
** ''Film/{{Thor}}'': Creator/SamRaimi originally envisioned making a ''Thor'' movie after ''Film/{{Darkman}}''. He met Creator/StanLee and pitched the concept to 20th Century Fox, but they did not understand it. The project was abandoned for a while, but the success of ''Film/XMen1'' in 2000 helped it gain some momentum. The film went through several writers, directors, and studios before the rights went back to Marvel in 2006, who finally produced the film and released it in May 2011.
** Yet another Marvel property, ''ComicBook/CaptainAmerica'', also languished in development hell as far back as 1997. In May 2000, Marvel teamed with Artisan Entertainment to help finance the film. However, a lawsuit arose between Marvel Comics and Joe Simon over the ownership of Captain America copyrights, disrupting the development process of the film. The lawsuit was eventually settled in September 2003. The rights were later acquired by Marvel in 2005 who were planning to independently produce several films with Creator/ParamountPictures distributing, and [[Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger the film]] finally saw release on July 22, 2011.
** A Comicbook/DoctorStrange film has been considered for three decades, with big names like Creator/NeilGaiman and Creator/GuillermoDelToro attached. An adaptation of sorts did get off the ground under Full Moon Features, but hastily became a CaptainErsatz product when they lost the rights, becoming ''Film/DoctorMordrid''. But as soon as the MCU started up properly, production streamed through from 2010 onwards and [[Film/DoctorStrange2016 a movie of the Sorcerer Supreme]] was done as part of Phase Three of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, starring Creator/BenedictCumberbatch and directed by Creator/ScottDerrickson, hitting theaters in late 2016.
** Creator/WesleySnipes began campaigning for a ComicBook/BlackPanther film in 1992, and even after he was cast to play the title character in the popular ''Film/BladeTrilogy'', the project was still in various stages of production throughout most of the '90s and the TurnOfTheMillennium. Avi Arad announced a ''Black Panther'' movie as part of the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse way back in 2005, but nothing came of it until late 2014, when Marvel officially confirmed that a ''[[Film/BlackPanther2018 Black Panther]]'' movie starring Creator/ChadwickBoseman was released in 2018. Like the Wonder Woman example below, Marvel first introduced the character in another movie (''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar'') before spinning him off into his own film in 2018.
** A ComicBook/BlackWidow film was first considered when Lionsgate commissioned a script from Creator/DavidHayter back in 2004 before dropping the project, and once Creator/ScarlettJohansson became the MCU's Natasha Romanoff in 2010, Kevin Feige and Marvel were soon discussing making a solo movie. The movie finally got announced in July 2018, with Jac Schaeffer tapped to write and Cate Shortland as director. Filming eventually started in early 2019, and [[Film/BlackWidow2021 the movie was ultimately made]], but ended up being one of the ''many'' projects screwed by the Usefulnotes/Covid19Pandemic hitting less than two months before its original scheduled debut, forcing three delays. The movie finally hit theaters (and [[Creator/DisneyPlus streaming]]) in July 2021.
** Attempts to get the ball rolling on a ComicBook/ShangChi movie date back to the 1980s, when Creator/StanLee reportedly met with Creator/BrandonLee about possibly playing the character. In 2003, a Shang-Chi film was announced to be in development at [=DreamWorks=], with Hong Kong action legend Creator/YuenWooPing directing and Creator/AngLee producing. The production soon fell by the wayside and the character’s rights reverted to Marvel, who subsequently mentioned Shang-Chi as one of the projects being developed for the nascent MCU back in 2006. Despite this, the movie wouldn’t officially pick up steam until a writer was hired in late 2018, which was followed by director Creator/DestinDanielCretton signing on in 2019. The resultant movie, ''Film/ShangChiAndTheLegendOfTheTenRings'', would finally be released in 2021, with Creator/SimuLiu starring in the title role.
** The third ''Guardians of the Galaxy'' was placed on indefinite hold after Disney executive Alan Horn fired director James Gunn in July 2018 for some nearly decade-old offensive jokes made on Twitter (that he's sincerely apologized for). Although Disney and Marvel kept Gunn's script out of goodwill, the film lost its original 2020 release date when it became clear no director wanted to take over in light of the controversy, and several cast members, most notably [[Wrestling/{{Batista}} Dave Batista]], threatened to leave in protest of Gunn's dismissal. Worse, it turned out that the jokes were dug up by alt-right trolls trying to smear Gunn for his political views, thus discouraging anyone from associating themselves with the film. Three months after his firing, Gunn was hired by Warner Bros. to write and direct a new ''ComicBook/SuicideSquad'' film, making him even less likely to come back to MCU. Gunn's dismissal also led to the scrapping of many of the cosmic storylines that would take place after ''Film/AvengersEndgame'', since he was supposed to oversee them. Although Gunn was rehired in March 2019, his commitments to ''Film/TheSuicideSquad'' and the COVID-19 pandemic pushed filming alone to 2021, with ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol3'' finally landing a mid-2023 release date.
* ''Film/MaryPoppins'':
** Creator/WaltDisney had first considered making a live-action adaptation of ''Literature/MaryPoppins'' as early as 1938, but author P.L. Travers didn't think it could do justice for her books, mainly because Disney hadn't done any live-action films at the time. After sales of the books started declining, Mrs. Travers finally met with Disney to discuss a movie treatment, and the story finally reached theaters in 1964.
** Plans for a sequel, based on some of the later books, date back to at least 1965, with an actual outline prepared during TheEighties. However, CreativeDifferences with Mrs. Travers caused it to become shelved. (Among others, Mrs. Travers wanted the sequel to feature Mary Poppins taking Jane and Michael Banks on further adventures, while Disney wanted to explore the possibility of a grown-up Jane or Michael hiring Mary Poppins as the nanny of her or his own children.) Production on the sequel, now titled ''Film/MaryPoppinsReturns'', resumed in TheNewTens (following Disney's own idea of an adult Michael hiring Mary Poppins as nanny of his own children), with a December 2018 release date.
* A film adaptation of the ''Theatre/LesMiserables'' musical was discussed for many years; the 1991 souvenir program for the stage show claimed it was coming out in 1993 via [=TriStar=] Pictures. Universal Pictures was the studio that finally brought [[Film/LesMiserables2012 the movie to the light of day in December 2012]].
* ''Film/MissPettigrewLivesForADay'': In 1939, the film rights for the novel were bought, and production was about to begin when UsefulNotes/WorldWarII started, throwing everything into a spin. The movie was shelved. They tried again in 1954, but nothing came of it. The movie finally was released in 2008. Nearly ''seven decades'' after the movie rights were purchased. A sequel is now in the works. Let's see how long the development period will be on that one.
* Creator/PeterJackson purchased the film rights to the novel ''Literature/MortalEngines'' in 2009, but the project was put on the back burner due to Jackson and his production company already being busy making ''Film/TheHobbit'' trilogy. Production would officially start in 2016, with the [[Film/MortalEngines final film]] being released in December 2018.
* Following the failure of ''Film/MortalKombatAnnihilation'', a third movie based on the games but independent of that languished for decades, including a project that was supposed to be filmed in Louisiana until Katrina ravaged it, and another that would follow the interest raised by ''WebVideo/MortalKombatRebirth''. Only in 2019 did a new ''Film/{{Mortal Kombat|2021}}'' finally started filming, hitting theaters in 2021.
* Creator/ShaneBlack wrote the first version of ''Film/TheNiceGuys'' in 2002. In the intervening years, where he even begun directing with ''Film/KissKissBangBang'', he tried reworking the screenplay into a TV pilot, only to have its questionable content halt any network ambitions. Then after 2013's ''Film/IronMan3'', Black decided to make ''The Nice Guys'' - which by this time had been changed from a contemporary work to a period piece set in TheSeventies. It was announced in 2014, filmed the following year, and released in 2016.
* Creator/SergioLeone's gangster epic ''Film/OnceUponATimeInAmerica'' (1984). Leone read Harry Grey's novel ''The Hoods'' in 1967, and wanted to adapt it as a follow-up to ''Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly''. It took Leone 17 years of planning, arm-twisting, fund-procuring, and numerous screenplays to bring ''The Hoods'' to the big screen - during which time he directed two other films and produced several others.
* The rights to the movie ''Film/OneForTheMoney'', based on the book of the same name by Janet Evanovich, were bought in the late 1990s by Creator/TriStarPictures. In early 2010, Lions Gate Entertainment announced that they were going to make the movie with Julie Anne Robinson directing and Katherine Heigl as the main character. The movie was shot from July to September 2010, but for whatever reason wasn't released until January 2012. The movie ended up bombing in theaters and was critically panned.
* ''Film/{{Ophelia}}'': According to Lisa Klein, author of the YA novel [[TheFilmOfTheBook the film is based upon]], the movie rights were first optioned when the book was published in 2006, but it took nearly ten years for it to be greenlit. Filming concluded in 2017 and it premiered at Sundance in 2018, before getting a wider theatrical release in 2019.
* ''Film/TheOtherSideOfTheWind'', Creator/OrsonWelles' last completed film, began shooting throughout 1970-1976, but endured a TroubledProduction due to financial problems and a legal tangle of epic proportions. The latter especially would lead to the film not being released until ''2018'', after a team that included actor Creator/PeterBogdanovich [[note]]who starred in the film and had since become a director[[/note]] and Creator/AmblinEntertainment's Frank Marshall[[note]]for whom the film was his first gig in the industry[[/note]] worked with Creator/{{Netflix}} to get the film out of legal hell and finally finished, premiering at the 75th Venice International Film Festival before appearing on Netflix later that year. The critical reception was well worth the effort, but a gap of '''''42 years''''' from start to finish is nothing to sneeze at.
* Director Michael Caton-Jones originally [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/michael-caton-jones-direct-catholic-choir-comedy-sopranos-1159464 optioned]] the film rights for ''Literature/TheSopranosWarner'' with his own money when the book was first published in 1998 and spent the next twenty years trying to get the project off the ground, the resulting film ''Film/OurLadies2019'' was released in August 2021.
* ''Film/{{Patton}}''. Producer Frank [=McCarthy=] first mooted a biopic of George S. Patton as early as 1953. Then the project was repeatedly delayed due to studio politics, budget issues, rotating stars (with everyone from Creator/JohnWayne to Creator/BurtLancaster to Rod Steiger attached at various points) and script disagreements. The main obstacle though was the opposition of Patton's family. [=McCarthy=] and 20th Century Fox ended up securing rights to Omar Bradley's memoir ''A Soldier's Story'' and Ladislas Fargo's ''Patton: Ordeal and Triumph'' to skirt their resistance, and the movie was finally released in 1970.
* This happened to the 2002 ''Film/PeterPan''. The original plans were made by producer Lucy Fisher who acquired the rights in 1980.
* The movie adaptation of Creator/AndrewLloydWebber's ''Literature/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' was being talked about at the end of TheEighties but didn't arrive until 2004.
* One of the strangest cases of development hell occurred with the film ''Film/PhoneBooth''. Writer Creator/LarryCohen began work on the project in the 1960's as a project for Creator/AlfredHitchcock. After Hitchcock died, the screenplay was shelved until Creator/JoelSchumacher read the screenplay and shot the film on a low budget for two weeks in 2000 (with a then-unknown Creator/ColinFarrell and Ron Eldard as the villain). After seeing a rough cut of the film, Fox shelved the project and re-shot Eldard's scenes with [[spoiler: Kiefer Sutherland]]. While the film was on the shelf, Cohen reworked parts of the Phone Booth screenplay, updated the technology and sold ''Film/{{Cellular}}'' to New Line Cinema (which was released in 2004) with Creator/ChrisEvans in the lead role. Eventually, Fox scheduled ''Phone Booth'' for November 15th, 2002, only for it to be delayed to April 4th, 2003 [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents following the Washington, D.C. beltway sniper attacks]], and the film managed to become a hit at the box office.
* The rumors of a remake/reboot of ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'' were first floated around the turn of the millennium, with everyone from Creator/KevinSpacey to Creator/ChrisTucker to Creator/MikeMyers reportedly being considered for Inspector Clouseau.[[note]]Myers was apparently the favorite of the studio, but his asking fee was too high.[[/note]] It filmed as [[Film/ThePinkPanther2006 a reboot]] in 2004 with Creator/SteveMartin, but wasn't released until early 2006, largely due to a studio merger in the interim. There was also some editing done, in order to re-cast it as a family-friendly comedy rather than the more ribald, raunchy film of its original iteration.
* In 1988, Fox got interested in making a new ''Franchise/PlanetOfTheApes'' with Adam Rifkin (who would later write ''Film/{{Mousehunt}}'' and ''Film/SmallSoldiers'', among others). New executives made the project crash. Creator/PeterJackson, Creator/OliverStone, Creator/ChrisColumbus, Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger and Creator/JamesCameron were involved with the movie in the following years. It only took off after William Broyles, Jr. (''Film/{{Apollo 13}}'', later ''Film/CastAway'') wrote a script in 1999, which attracted Creator/TimBurton, and led to [[Film/PlanetOfTheApes2001 the film released in 2001]].
* ''Film/{{Predators}}'' was based on a 1996 script by Creator/RobertRodriguez. The finished film was released in 2010.
* Creator/WilliamGoldman tried to get his book ''Literature/ThePrincessBride'' made into a movie for about a decade. He had a deal with one studio, but the CEO was fired and the first thing the new guy does, according to Goldman, is to cancel all projects in progress (so the old guy doesn't get any credit if any of them are hits). He made another deal with a different studio, only to have the ''entire studio'' shut down.
* In 2014 Italian comic book author Zerocalcare mentioned that his comic book ''La profezia dell'Armadillo'' ("The Armadillo Prophecy") was being adapted into a movie. Nothing else was said again until late 2017, where the film was confirmed but seemingly without Zerocalcare's involvement. When the film actually came out in September 2018 (again without comment from Zerocalcare), it was clear why: it was a very poor adaptation that lasted a very short time in theaters and was totally forgotten afterwards.
* Creator/GeorgeLucas began development on ''Film/RedTails'' in 1988, but could not get any studio to produce the film (due to studios being uneasy on an adventure film with a mostly black cast). Finally, he decided to finance the film himself and had most of it filmed between 2009 and 2010. Then the film entered post-production hell due to the many scenes of visual effects, the difficulty in finding a distributor, and the film's director being unavailable for reshoots (due to his work on the show ''Series/{{Treme}}''). The film was finally released in 2012.
* ''Film/TheRevenant'', a revenge drama [[VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory inspired]] by the legend of UsefulNotes/HughGlass and his tale of survival after being mauled by [[BearsAreBadNews a bear]], had been in development since 2001. In its first inception, director Creator/ParkChanWook was originally in line to make the project with Creator/SamuelLJackson to star and David Rabe to write but left and the project went into limbo for a while. In 2007, a new script was written by Mark L. Smith and wound up on the Hollywood Blacklist of best unproduced scripts. In 2010, the project gained tract again with director John Hillcoat (''Film/TheProposition'', the film version of ''Literature/TheRoad'') and Creator/ChristianBale but after that fell through, Creator/AlejandroGonzalezInarritu and {{Creator/Leonardo DiCaprio}} joined the project a year later and began filming in 2014 after Iñárritu was finished with ''Film/BirdmanOrTheUnexpectedVirtueOfIgnorance''. After a long and much-noted TroubledProduction, the film finally came out on December 25th, 2015 to box office and critical success, finally earning [=DiCaprio=] his Best Actor Oscar while Iñárritu picked up another Best Director Oscar in row after his ''Birdman'' win.
* Screen Gems announced interest in a ''Franchise/RoboCop'' remake as early as 2005. MGM announced an interest in reworking the franchise three years later. Three more years later, a director (José Padilha of ''Film/TheEliteSquad'') was hired, and another three were necessary for [[Film/RoboCop2014 said remake to hit theaters]].
* ''Film/Scream2022''. [[Film/Scream4 The fourth film]] was supposed to be the start of a new trilogy (with Kevin Williamson writing outlines for the next two films), but after it failed to make money at the domestic box office (though it [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff did well overseas]]), the Weinsteins decided not to make it a top priority. However, they kept dropping hints that it was still going to happen, possibly as the conclusion to the whole franchise (since the fourth film ended on something of a cliffhanger). Williamson has said that he's not writing the fifth film, likely because of the ExecutiveMeddling that occurred during the fourth. MTV went on to air a [[Series/ScreamTVSeries television adaptation]] with a completely different storyline and set of characters, and then the Weinsteins said there will be no fifth film. Then Creator/WesCraven (director of all four films) died. Then the TV series itself was completely rebooted with [[Series/ScreamResurrection the third season]], ending its original story on a cliffhanger. A year after the TV series ended, a fifth film, simply titled ''Scream'', was finally announced to be in development, with Williamson executive producing and the three main actors (Creator/NeveCampbell, Creator/DavidArquette, and Creator/CourteneyCox) all returning. Filming was finished in November 2020, and it was released in 2022, after the COVID-19 pandemic delayed it by a year.
* ''Film/SinCityADameToKillFor'', which was supposed to be released in 2008, finally came out in 2014. This caused several cases of TheOtherDarrin since [[Creator/MichaelClarkeDuncan some]] [[Creator/BrittanyMurphy actors]] had died in the intervening years.
* ''Film/{{Sonic the Hedgehog|2020}}'', based on the [[VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog video game franchise]], had been on and off in production since the early 1990s but it seemed that it would never be realized. The rights were first picked up by MGM, and a treatment was written and submitted to the studio before MGM and Creator/{{Sega}} got into some financial and legal problems. Eventually, MGM lost the rights and the film went into hell, only for Ben Hurst, a head writer for ''WesternAnimation/SonicTheHedgehogSatAM'', to negotiate the rights so that he could do a continuation of what was supposed to be the third season. This ran into problems when Creator/KenPenders, then-head writer of the [[ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics comic book series]], tried to intervene and make the movie himself. It was placed in hell once again when Sega decided to place more interest in ''Anime/SonicX''. It seemed to finally get off the ground once more as Sony eventually bought the rights and assembled Neal Moritz and Tim Miller as producers before Sony canceled the project after placing it into turnaround due to Lone Star Funds pulling out of their financing deal with the studio and studio head Tom Rothman having no confidence with the film. Luckily, Moritz had just bailed Sony for a new first-look contract at Creator/{{Paramount}} around the time of cancellation so he and Paramount negotiated the rights away from Sony, taking much of the movie's staff with them and finally sending the movie back on track. Filming began in July 2018 and the movie finally came out on February 14, 2020.
* The rights to the remake of the 1976 movie ''Film/{{Sparkle}}'' were bought by Music/WhitneyHouston's production company in the mid-90s, and Music/{{Aaliyah}} was intended to be cast as the lead. However, after Aaliyah's death in a plane crash in 2001, the film was not produced. In 2005, interest in the remake started again with Creator/RavenSymone in talks to star. In 2011, Mara Brock Akil and Salim Akil, the producers of ''Film/JumpingTheBroom'', took on ''Sparkle'' as their next project (with Jordin Sparks in the lead and Houston as her mother) and filming ended in November 2011. The movie was released on August 17, 2012 (sadly, Houston had passed away earlier that year).
* The ''Film/SpeedRacer'' live-action film was first announced in 1992. Four directors later and through many casting, studio, and writer changes, the film was released in May 2008.
* A ''Film/SpiderMan1'' film was released in 2002, after the filming rights jumped through several companies for 20 years: [[Creator/TheCannonGroup Cannon Films]], which almost made a low-budget flick in the vein of ''Film/{{Superman IV|TheQuestForPeace}}''; Creator/CarolcoPictures, which even considered a screenplay by Creator/JamesCameron before suffering financial and legal troubles; and [[Creator/MetroGoldwynMayer MGM]], which traded the rights with Columbia for the rights to ''Literature/CasinoRoyale''.
* A film adaptation of ''Literature/{{Stargirl}}'' was announced in 2015. It spent years in development hell but was finished filming in 2019. However, it stayed shelved until [[Film/{{Stargirl}} it was greenlit]] for a Creator/DisneyPlus release in 2020.
* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
** The prequels only started development in 1993, 10 years after ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' (and [[Film/ThePhantomMenace the first]] reached theaters six years later), as Creator/GeorgeLucas felt audiences still had interest in his saga, and ''Film/JurassicPark'' showed effects were advanced enough to make his ideas easy to film.
** The Sequel Trilogy was planned since 1975, as Lucas' original idea was for 9 movies (with [[Film/ANewHope the first filmed]] being [[AnachronicOrder the fourth]]). After later being abandoned and denied for several years - ultimately during production of the prequels, as Lucas stated he had no interest in continuing the story as the hexalogy provided a complete HerosJourney for [[FallenHero Anakin/Vader]] - the trilogy was brought back in 2012 after Disney's purchase of Lucasfilm. ''Star Wars: Episode VII: Film/TheForceAwakens'' was released in December 2015, ''Episode VIII: Film/TheLastJedi'' was released in December 2017, and ''Episode IX: Film/TheRiseOfSkywalker'' was released in December 2019. In-between the regular chapters, Disney released {{Spin Off}}s, with ''Film/RogueOne'' in 2016 and ''Film/{{Solo}}'' in 2018.
* Creator/StevenSpielberg's [[AttentionDeficitCreatorDisorder busy schedule]] lead to many instances of this.
** ''Film/AIArtificialIntelligence'': the story that inspired it was published in 1969, Creator/StanleyKubrick begun thinking about adapting it in the early '70s (complete with bringing the author to adapt), brought in Spielberg to the project in 1985, and many false-start announcements appeared through the '90s. Then he died in 1999, Spielberg assumed control of the project, and the film finally took off.
** Since ''A.I.'' was mentioned, two films Spielberg considered directing at the time: ''Film/MinorityReport'' (announced as early as 1998 - postponed twice, first by ''A.I.'', then by Creator/TomCruise's ''[[Film/MissionImpossibleII M:I:2]]'') and ''Film/MemoirsOfAGeisha'' (eventually released in 2005, but only produced by Spielberg).
** ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfTintin2011'', which has a story very close to ''Franchise/IndianaJones'': Creator/StevenSpielberg met the comic after ''Film/RaidersOfTheLostArk'' was compared to the series, tried to make a movie but became dissatisfied and did ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheLastCrusade'' instead, and finally started motion capture (with Creator/PeterJackson's assistance) after ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull'' was finished.
** Spielberg got interested in ''Film/{{Lincoln}}'' after the writer revealed the biography ''Team of Rivals'' in 1999 and purchased the rights two years later. The book came out in 2005, and the film released in 2012.
** The concept for the film ''Film/{{Interstellar}}'' was first concieved in the early-to-mid 2000s by black hole physicist Kip Thorne and film producer Lynda Obst, who had been friends since Creator/CarlSagan set them up on a blind date decades earlier. The idea attracted Spielberg and development began in 2006, but the project got sent into a spiral when Dreamworks shifted distributors from Paramount to Disney, unmooring Spielberg from the project. The film was finally released in 2014, directed by Creator/ChristopherNolan.
* For some unknown reason, there was a 14-year gap between the fourth ''Film/StTrinians'' movie (''The Great St. Trinian's Train Robbery'', 1966) and the fifth (''The Wildcats of St. Trinian's'', 1980). But there's no mystery why there was a 27-year gap between ''Wildcats'' and the sixth (''Film/{{St Trinians|2007}}'', 2007); ''Wildcats'' was reportedly so dire that it's the only one not available on DVD.
* ''Film/{{Superbad}}'' was written by Creator/SethRogen and Evan Goldberg in the mid-'90s, as a way to prove that they could write a movie script. Years later, after working with Creator/JuddApatow on the short-lived TV series ''Series/{{Undeclared}}'', they pitched the script to him. Originally, Seth Rogen was to play the role of Seth, and he recorded a script reading of the lines back in '02. During the early and mid-2000s, they could not find a company who wanted to distribute the film. The script also went through a few revisions, the whole idea of Seth and Evan going to separate colleges, and the emotional friendship stuff was added in a later revision. Anyway, after the success of ''Film/TalladegaNightsTheBalladOfRickyBobby'', Apatow and Rogen pitched the script to Creator/ColumbiaPictures, and they accepted it. But by this time, Rogen looked too old to play the role of Seth, so they had then-unknown Creator/JonahHill take the role.
* [[Film/SupermanReturns The fifth film]] in the ''Film/{{Superman}}'' franchise was stuck in pre-production for nearly two decades. The first part of this was mostly the producers wanting to distance themselves from the failure of ''Film/SupermanIVTheQuestForPeace'', while the latter half was due to ExecutiveMeddling driving director after [[Creator/KevinSmith director]] after director away from the project. ''Its'' proposed sequel similarly became mired in development hell, after ''Superman Returns''' lackluster performance at the box office caused a sequel to be put on the back burner, and Creator/BryanSinger abandoned the project to direct ''Film/{{Valkyrie}}'' instead. When a Superman film ''finally'' came back into production, it was as a ContinuityReboot, ''Film/ManOfSteel'', with a new cast and director Zack Snyder, producer Creator/ChristopherNolan, and writer David Goyer. The latter two were responsible for the successful [[Film/TheDarkKnightTrilogy reboot]] of the Batman franchise, incidentally... (see below)
* The 2000 film ''Film/{{Supernova}}'' (not to be confused with any of the many other films with that title) was in development for 12 years and cost an estimated 60 million dollars. Although the theatrical version runs only 87 minutes (the director's cut is 91), reportedly several hours of completed footage exists, much of it self-contradictory due to changes made to the script during the filming stage. Both Creator/FrancisFordCoppola and Creator/HRGiger were involved at one point.
* The ''Franchise/{{Terminator}}'' franchise post-''[[Film/Terminator2JudgmentDay T2]]'':
** ''Film/Terminator3RiseOfTheMachines'', helped by the collapse of Creator/{{Carolco|Pictures}}, complicating an already complex rights ownership situation. Rights bought in 1997, Schwarzenegger hired in 2001, the movie came out two years later.
** ''Film/TerminatorSalvation'', which also burned in said DevelopmentHell during its production as well. There were ''seven'' writers of the script when you include Jonathan Nolan and the two guys who actually did the original script, and the ending was fundamentally altered after test audiences reacted negatively.
** ''Film/TerminatorGenisys'', helped by ''Salvation'''s production company going bankrupt. The hedge fund they owed money to became the rights holders before selling them to Megan Ellison's Annapurna Films in 2012. Ellison's brother David and others from his Skydance Productions agreed to co-produce the film, which came out three years later.
* ''Film/ThisMeansWar2012'''s initial script goes back at least a decade, with screenwriter Larry Doyle claiming he read an early draft of the script in 1998. Creator/SethRogen, Creator/BradleyCooper, Creator/SamWorthington, Creator/ChrisRock, and Creator/MartinLawrence all declined roles in the film. It was finally released in 2012 starring Creator/TomHardy, Creator/ChrisPine and Creator/ReeseWitherspoon.
* ''Film/TrickRTreat'' went through post-production hell. It was supposed to have been released in 2007, but was eventually released in October of 2009 on DVD. Some saw this as a punishment to Bryan Singer from Warner Bros. who was disappointed with ''Superman Returns''.
* Due to several directors dropping in and out in the course of making the film, the movie adaptation of ''VideoGame/{{Uncharted}}'' had percolating in various forms for over a decade. The film spent most of 2019 picking up steam with full casting for a shoot that Fall when the director, Travis Knight, had to drop out due to his and star Creator/TomHolland's clashing schedules. They found another director, Rueben Fleischer, and cameras were supposed to start rolling in Spring 2020 with the cast and crew assembled in Berlin. Then everyone got sent home and production was shut down until July due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Production wrapped on October 29 that year, and ''Film/{{Uncharted}}'' hit theaters in February 11, 2022.
* ''ComicBook/VForVendetta'' and 'ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' were both announced as films in the mid-1980s and were mired in development hell well into the 2000s, due to budgetary concerns, the difficulty of finding suitable directors, and Creator/AlanMoore's complete unwillingness to participate in adaptations of his graphic novels. ''Film/VForVendetta'' eventually saw release in 2006, and ''Film/{{Watchmen}}'' was released in 2009. Both these films seem to have come to fruition due mainly to the enormous clout of Creator/TheWachowskis and Creator/ZackSnyder.
* The planned ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'' film adaptation has been mired in development problems for years. The rights to the franchise were acquired by Legendary in 2006, and Blizzard brought on Sam Raimi to direct. According to interviews, the first script (which was written by Blizzard's in-house writers) didn't go over well with Raimi, and a second script (written by Raimi and screenwriter Robert Rodat) wasn't accepted by Blizzard, who wanted the story to go a different way. After months of back-and-forth, Raimi walked from the project, blaming mismanagement on Blizzard's part. As of early 2013, Legendary announced that Duncan Jones (''{{Film/Moon}}'') became attached to direct and it all became smooth, yet also painfully slow, sailing. The ''Film/WarCraft'' film was finally released in June 2016.
* ''Film/TheWarriorsWay'' was meant to come out early 2008... almost 3 years later it finally found itself in cinemas.
* Creator/WoodyAllen wrote the screenplay of ''Film/WhateverWorks'' in the 1970s, with Zero Mostel in mind for the main role. After Mostel died in 1977, Allen shelved the project for more than thirty years. The film was eventually released in 2009, starring Creator/LarryDavid.
* The film adaptation of the ''ComicBook/{{Whiteout}}'' comic book finally got released in 2009 after having been announced nearly 10 years ago.
* Creator/TomClancy's ''Literature/WithoutRemorse'' had its filming rights bought shortly after its 1993 release by Savoy Pictures, who couldn't get the project done by its bankruptcy four years later. Paramount, who repeatedly adapted Clancy's Literature/JackRyan, eventually got the project but couldn't get it off the ground until Creator/MichaelBJordan got attached to ''Without Remorse'' in 2018, and [[Film/WithoutRemorse the film adaptation]] hit Prime Video in 2021.
* ''Film/TheWolfman2010'' was planned out and was to be directed by Mark Romanek (of ''Film/OneHourPhoto'' fame), but he left due to not being able to make changes during the writer's strike at the time. Joe Johnston took over and shot the film in spring/summer of 2008 for a fall 2008 release, but was held back until 2010 due to re-shoots by demand of the studio.
* ''Film/TheXFilesIWantToBelieve'' suffered a similar ordeal but in a smaller scale and shorter time period.
* ''Film/XMenFilmSeries'':
** Throughout 1989 and 1990, Creator/StanLee and Creator/ChrisClaremont were in discussions with Creator/JamesCameron and Carolco Pictures for an ''Franchise/XMen'' film adaptation. The deal fell apart when Cameron went to work on ''Spider-Man'', Carolco went bankrupt, and the film rights reverted to Marvel Studios. In December 1992, Marvel discussed selling the property to Creator/ColumbiaPictures to no avail. Meanwhile, Avi Arad produced ''WesternAnimation/XMenTheAnimatedSeries'' for Creator/FoxKids. Creator/TwentiethCenturyFox was impressed by the success of the TV show, and producer Lauren Shuler Donner purchased the film rights for them in 1994. [[Film/XMen1 The film]] went through a number of scripts and actor and director changes and was eventually released in July 2000, starting a long-running film series and spawning a reemergence of superhero films.
** The ''Film/Deadpool2016'' movie was announced as far back as 2000; when [[Creator/TwentiethCenturyStudios 20th Century Fox]] got their hands on the project, they originally planned it as a spin-off of ''Film/XMenOriginsWolverine'' with Creator/RyanReynolds reprising his role as the title character. The overwhelmingly negative reception to ''Origins'' nipped these plans in the bud, and though various screenplays still floated around, it wasn't until 2014 that Fox ''finally'' gave the project the green light (thanks primarily to the overwhelmingly positive response to some leaked test footage which had been sitting on a shelf since 2012), with the film finally released on February 2016 to enormous success. And in case you're wondering, [[CanonDiscontinuity no, the final film is not connected to]] ''Origins'' in any way ([[TakeThat besides taking multiple potshots at it]]); it helps that ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'' gave ''Film/Deadpool2016'' a major out by outright {{retcon}}ning ''Origins'' out of the ''Film/XMenFilmSeries'' movie canon.
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