As originally envisioned, the historical action epic Desert Warrior would be a film of groundbreaking firsts. It would be the first Hollywood-style tentpole movie shot entirely on location in Saudi Arabia under its de facto supreme ruler Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030, a.k.a. the culture-washing governmental push intended to liberate Saudi society from its “addiction” to oil through soft-power alternatives like tourism and entertainment. Directed by Rise of the Planet of the Apes filmmaker Rupert Wyatt and starring Marvel Cinematic Universe stalwart Anthony Mackie (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Captain America: Civil War), Desert Warrior would also be the inaugural movie project to shoot at Neom Media, a state-of-the-art, multibazillion-dollar media complex and studio backlot attached to Neom City, a metropolis bordering the Red Sea.

But when cameras began to roll in September 2021, neither Neom nor the country’s moviemaking infrastructure was quite ready for its Hollywood close-up. With construction not nearly complete on the studio’s 130,000 square feet of promised production space, the Desert Warrior team was forced to improvise. To house the cavernous throne room of Sir Ben Kingsley’s power-hungry Emperor Kisra — a space giant enough to showcase bloody gladiator battles, extravagant scenes of prisoner torture, and rampaging elephants — the crew built a massive ad hoc soundstage in the parking lot of the Grand Millennium Hotel in Tabuk that was cooled by giant fans against the pulverizing desert heat. “It was like an inflatable stadium; it was this amazing thing,” recalls one person who was on set for the duration of production. “There were no studios. There were studios after us because of the film.”

It would not be the last time production staff was forced to effectively build the plane during takeoff. An array of physical production challenges, missing infrastructure, well-intentioned naïveté, regional warfare, and “creative differences” combined to forestall final cut and imperil the movie’s sale to international distributors. Words such as flop and forgotten became affixed to Desert Warrior in the movie industry well before its release. This weekend — four years and seven months since cameras first rolled on the project — Desert Warrior squeaked onto 1,010 American screens with the barest minimum of marketing and failed to crack the top ten of new movies. It grossed a mere $472,000: an unmitigated disaster.

by ChiefLeef22

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20 Comments

  1. Anthony Mackie is not a leading man. Please Hollywood…stop.

    The guys a charisma vacuum

    He’s fine in secondary roles but it’s usually the cast around him that elevates his role.

  2. that_70_show_fan on

    If they used local talent instead of these grandiose gestures, it could have been interesting.

  3. TyposIncoming on

    Usually a bad sign when the movie they reference for you is 15 years old because you haven’t made anything as close to as good or successful since

  4. supercoolpartydude on

    Saudis own 40% of Paramount/WB, so this’ll be on Paramount+ soon enough lol.

  5. The Saudi’s are incredibly rich and incredibly stupid. The amount of bullshit they blow money on is wild. And it’s not even like the stuff is good. They just get grifted out of billions by people hyping BS. Movies, golf, boxing etc.

  6. Shot-Philosopher1750 on

    The movie actually isn’t dreadful. It’s just boring. And messy. Beautifully shot. Well acted. Tried to be Ghandi and Gladiator and gave neither. There was actually a good movie in there somewhere. If a real studio had made it maybe it would have been different.

    But the last act wasn’t bad. Still a mess.

    Technically biggest bomb sure but not apples to apples comparisons to other bombs.

    This was released by Vertical. Zero ad campaign. They didn’t make it for 150 million. They probably bought the US rights for a million or something.

    It was financed by Saudi’s and to them 150 million is like 5 dollars. It was a first attempt to start a movie production hub in Saudi Arabia. Technical production was actully pretty good.

    The 1.9 rating on IMDB is fake. Mega downvoting. Over 70 percent 1s mostly from Saudi Arabia. The Rotten Tomatoes verified score is probably more accurate at 62. That can’t be downvoted or faked. (still a little high for my tastes)

    The Saudis hate the idea of it because it was not historically accurate and made for westerners. And the fake US votes are political… pick a reason 9/11… killing journalists… how they treat women.

  7. If they want a movie scene, they should just dump a shitload of money into grants and make them easy to get. The kind of thing has to come from the ground up.

  8. So bizzare to hear about such a big movie I’d never heard of when I’m very generally pay way more attention to new releases than a lot of people.

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