Box Office Poison Audiobook By Tim Robey cover art

Box Office Poison

Hollywood's Story in a Century of Flops

Preview
LIMITED TIME OFFER

3 months free
Try for $0.00
Offer ends July 31, 2025 at 11:59PM PT.
Pick 1 audiobook a month from our unmatched collection.
Listen all you want to thousands of included audiobooks, Originals, and podcasts.
Access exclusive sales and deals.
Premium Plus auto-renews for $14.95/mo after 3 months. Cancel anytime.

Box Office Poison

By: Tim Robey
Narrated by: Tim Robey
Try for $0.00

$0.00/mo. after 3 months. Offer ends July 31, 2025 at 11:59PM PT. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $25.19

Buy for $25.19

Confirm purchase
Pay using card ending in
By confirming your purchase, you agree to Audible's Conditions of Use, License, and Amazon's Privacy Notice. Taxes where applicable.
Cancel

About this listen

A riotous and revealing story of Hollywood’s most spectacular flops and how they ended careers, bankrupted studios and changed film history.

"Failure fascinates, for all the reasons that success is a drag…”


From grand follies to misunderstood masterpieces, disastrous sequels to catastrophic literary adaptations, Box Office Poison tells a hugely entertaining alternative history of Hollywood, through a century of its most notable flops. What can these films tell us about the Hollywood system, the public’s appetite–or lack of it–and the circumstances that saw such flops actually made? Away from the canon, this is the definitive take on these ill-fated, but essential celluloid failures.

Robey covers a vast century of flops, including: Intolerance; Queen Kelly; Freaks; Sylvia Scarlett; The Magnificent Ambersons; Land of the Pharoahs; Doctor Dolittle; Sorcerer; Dune; The Adventures of Baron Munchausen; Nothing But Trouble; The Hudsucker Proxy; Cutthroat Island; Speed 2: Cruise Control; Babe: Pig in the City; Supernova; Rollerball; The Adventures of Pluto Nash; Gigli; Alexander; Catwoman; A Sound of Thunder; Speed Racer; Synecdoche, New York; Pan; and Cats.

From Daily Telegraph film critic Tim Robey, this is a brilliantly fun exploration of human nature and stupidity in some of the greatest film flops throughout history.

©2024 Tim Robey (P)2024 Harlequin Enterprises, Limited
Entertainment & Performing Arts Film & TV History & Criticism
All stars
Most relevant  
Absolutely loved it. Smart, funny and historically revealing. Excited to check out more by Tim Robey.

The most entertaining film book I’ve read in years

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I was really hoping that it would come full circle, and it did. The author even used that exact phrase at the end. Wrapped up perfectly.

The ending

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Box Office Poison is a clever and insightful exploration of a subject movie buffs never knew they needed. I’ve never felt such morbid curiosity over a list of movie casualties.

This book dives deep into the biggest box office disasters in American cinema. It’s the film buff’s equivalent of watching one car crash after another—you can’t look away! You’ll be told who was behind the wheel, what caused the collision, who walked away unscathed, and who didn’t survive the wreck. The factors leading to each crash are as interesting as the crashes themselves.

The Best Book on the Worst Movies

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Worried at first that this book would be a downer, given the dreadful movies it covers, But found it to be a treasure trove of cinema history, funny throughout, and highlighted by fascinating inside baseball stories I'd never heard (since Hollywood journalism is primarily about HITS). It benefits from the across-the-pond Britiish critic's witty analysis that Hollywood is too blind to see. I wrote THE BIG DEAL: HOLLYWOOD'S MILLION-DOLLAR SPEC SCRIPT MARKET (HarperCollins 1999) about 1990s cinema -- which includes backstories on "Last Action Hero," "Waterworld," (which was just a dud, not a flop- eventually making back its costs, as Tim Robey so keenly explains) "Cutthroat Island" and several other flicks that Robey skewers. I can't recall when I last enjoyed a book on Hollywood so much -- film enthusiasts of all stripes will learn plenty from BOX-OFFICE POISON, while laughing and cringing simultaneously

Excellent BTS analysis of how Hollywood executives make decisions

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I really wanted to enjoy this book, but it fell short. Perhaps it would be better reading it in a book, but the authors necessity of telling you the year each movie is made when he mentioned it gets very repetitive and very boring.

Boring and dull

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.