10 Directors Who Sabotaged Their Own Movies

3. Michael Cimino - Heaven's Gate

Heaven's Gate Michael Cimino Kris Kristofferson
United Artists

Hot off the Best Picture and Best Director-winning The Deer Hunter, director Michael Cimino was effectively given carte blanche to helm his self-penned 1980 epic western Heaven's Gate.

And in perhaps the textbook example of directorial hubris run amok, Cimino's meticulous, dictatorial directing style caused the film to run massively over-schedule and over-budget.

He had a specifically built street torn down and re-made because it "didn't look right" and shot over 220 hours of footage, costing the studio $200,000 per day in production fees.

With Cimino's preference for dozens of takes and production slowing to a crawl, United Artists considered firing him, while reports suggest Cimino changed the locks to the editing suite to prevent executives from viewing any footage.

Cimino's first rough cut was 5 hours and 25 minutes long, and after the studio naturally balked at such a length, he cut it down by almost two hours. But following its disastrous premiere, the film was pulled from release for further re-editing.

The $44 million film grossed just $3.5 million, was panned by critics, and in addition to killing Cimino's reputation overnight, also effectively put United Artists out of business (until MGM later revived them).

On a broader level, Heaven's Gate's failure also resulted in a downturn in auteur-driven films and also in western productions.

The amount of collateral damage caused by Cimino's ego run amok is almost unthinkably catastrophic, even if his film has been re-evaluated in a positive light by some critics in recent years.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.