
22 Movies That Were Originally Supposed To Be Wayyyy Different
Plenty of movies go through rewrites or significant edits, but sometimes, what ends up onscreen is completely different from the original script or pitch.
Here are 22 movies that were originally supposed to be wayyyy different:
1. Monsters, Inc. director Pete Docter told the Creative Screenwriting podcast, "Well, my idea was that what it was about was about a 30-year-old man who is, like, an accountant or something. He hates his job, and one day he gets a book with some drawings in it that he did when he was a kid from his mom. And he doesn't think anything of it, and he puts it on the shelf, and that night, monsters show up. And nobody else can see them. He thinks he's starting to go crazy. They follow him to his job, and on his dates, and all this — and it turns out these monsters are fears that he never dealt with as a kid. And each one of them represents a different kind of fear."
"As he conquers those fears, the guys who he slowly becomes kind of friends with — they disappear as he conquers those fears. It's this bittersweet kinda ending where they go away, and so not much of that stayed," he said.
2. Per SyFy, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Poltergeist came out within a week of each other, but Steven Spielberg originally envisioned them as one movie called Watch the Skies. The project — which had an eventual name change to Night Skies — was a darker sequel to Close Encounters of the Third Kind. It followed a family who were antagonized by aliens trying to break into their house. Spielberg planned to produce the film while John Sayles wrote it, but he changed his mind while directing Raiders of the Lost Ark.
At the TCM Festival, he recalled, "I suddenly thought, 'Wait a second, what if that little creature [at the end of Close Encounters ] never went back to the ship? What if the creature was part of a foreign exchange program? And that was the feeling that I had. What if I turned my story about divorce into a story about children, a family, trying to fill the great need [of family]?" So, he devised a new story and pitched it to screenwriter Melissa Mathison, who was on set visiting Harrison Ford, her boyfriend at the time. She agreed to write E.T., and Spielberg turned it in at Columbia instead of his original pitch. Columbia passed, but Universal wanted it.
However, keeping the original concept of Night Skies, he changed the aliens to ghosts. That idea, combined with director Tobe Hooper's own research and ideas, evolved into Poltergeist.
3. Decades before Beetlejuice Beetlejuice hit theaters, there were two other failed Beetlejuice sequels in the works. According to IGN, Warner Bros. had screenwriter Warren Skaaren work on a loosely Phantom of the Opera -inspired sequel called Beetlejuice in Love. The Deetz family was absent from this story, but Beetlejuice set his sights on an opera singer named Leo, who met his death while proposing to his girlfriend, Julia. Beetlejuice exploited Leo's heartbreak and tried to trick him into returning to the world of the living so he could get married. In the end, Leo was reborn as a baby Julia cared for.
The second failed sequel was the infamous Beetlejuice Goes Hawaiian. Tim Burton was intrigued by the stark contrast between German Expressionism and a beach movie. He hired playwright Jonathan Gems to work on a script. In this story, Beetlejuice was stuck in a dead-end job as a supermarket janitor in the afterlife and lived in an apartment with his wife, Rita. But when the Deetz family traveled to Hawaii to open a new resort, which upset the local spirits, he came back into their lives. Despite being married, Beetlejuice was still romantically interested in Lydia, who had a new surfer boy love interest named Kimo. However, Kimo and his friends protested the resort and kidnapped Mr. Deetz. Eventually, Lydia partnered with Beetlejuice to stop her family's greed and save the island, but he tricked her into a wedding (like in the original film). His mom stopped the ceremony, and he fulfilled his promise to scare the tourists away.
In the end, Beetlejuice accidentally drank a love potion he got for Lydia and fell in love with Rita. He was also expelled to the Netherworld. Ultimately, the screenwriter left the film to pursue other opportunities, and by 1997, it was dead in the water because Winona Rider was too old to reprise teenage Lydia and would have to be recast.
4. Frozen producer Peter Del Vecho told Entertainment Weekly, "With all the movies we work on, eventually the film tells you what it needs to be, and if you're smart enough to listen to that, it leads you to a different direction than perhaps your preconceived notion. So when we started off, Anna and Elsa were not sisters. They weren't even royal. So Anna was not a princess. Elsa was a self-proclaimed Snow Queen, but she was a villain and pure evil — much more like the Hans Christian Andersen tale. We started out with an evil female villain and an innocent female heroine, and the ending involved a big epic battle with snow monsters that Elsa had created as her army…"
In many of the early drafts, the movie opened with a prophecy that "a ruler with a frozen heart will bring destruction to the kingdom of Arendelle." Elsa had frozen her own heart after being left at the altar. When Prince Hans started an avalanche to stop her snow monsters, putting Arendelle in danger, Anna went to Elsa for help stopping him. However, that version of Elsa didn't feel quite right, and they toyed with the idea of the main characters being sisters. After some consideration, the creative team had a "sister summit" to hear about other employees' experiences with their families.
5. When J.F. Lawton first began working on the script that would eventually become Pretty Woman, it wasn't even a rom-com! It was a gritty drama titled 3,000. He told Vanity Fair, " Wall Street had either come out or was coming out, I had heard about it and the whole issue about the financiers who were destroying companies. I kind of thought about the idea that one of these people would meet somebody who was affected by what they were doing." His initial script had many scenes and characters similar to Pretty Woman, but Vivian didn't end up with Edward. In the finale scene, she and her best friend, Kit, were on a bus to Disneyland. Kit's excitement was contrasted with Vivian's staring "out emptily ahead." After the original company that was attached to the project went bankrupt, it was "upgraded to Disney."
The script went thorugh multiple rewrites, transforming it into a rom-com, but Lawton was happy with this. He said, "I was thrilled! That's the other side of it, is that I'm supposed to be the wounded artist in all of this who painted the da Vinci or whatever, and then they slashed it. I was a guy who was writing ninja movies and trying to get a job. If you're an architect, and you design a cabin for the woods, and somebody says, 'We want to make it into a skyscraper'...the fact that Disney came in and wanted to do it as a big-budget movie with a major director was a great thing."
6. Ghostbusters director/producer Ivan Reitman told Entertainment Weekly, "Dan [Aykroyd] had written a treatment for something called Ghostbusters for himself and John Belushi. Then Belushi passed away, and the script sort of sat dormant for a couple of years. He sent it to me and said, 'Look, do you think this would be something you'd like to direct with me and Bill [Murray]?' I read it, and it was sort of a futuristic thing and it was competing groups of Ghostbusters and out in space."
Dan added, "It never went to outer space. That's Ivan's misinterpretation. It went to inner space. Now, superstring theory — 23 different dimensions, 11 different dimensions, what's in the 7th or 8th? We live in four. But anyway, it was my family business, the paranormal. My great-grandfather was an Edwardian spiritualist. There's a book called History of Ghosts. You can get it on Amazon. My dad wrote it. It's about mediumship and transmediumship and the afterlife and survival of the consciousness after death, so that was the kind of stuff I was reading as a kid."
He continued, "I originated Ghostbusters based upon reading that material and the real work of J.B. Rhine and [William G.] Roll and the Maimonides Dream Lab — real scientists who were into this. I took that from my family history, my family business, and married it with the ghost comedies of the 1930s — Abbot and Costello, Bing Crosby and Bob Hope, and the Bowery Boys. I mean, everyone did ghost movies. I just thought, 'Let's do a comedy ghost movie, but let's base it on the real research.' From that, I wrote a script, which is much darker than what was seen and was less accessible." The original version was considered too difficult to make, but Ivan helped streamline it to make it more manageable.
7. According to Vulture, The Emperor's New Groove was originally in development as Kingdom of the Sun, an Owen Wilson-led musical about a llama farmer who switched places with a narcissistic prince. The villain was a sorceress who plotted to block out the sun. The soundtrack was penned by Sting, and as the movie went into production, Trudie Styler, his wife, made a documentary about it.
Director Roger Allers told the outlet, "In [the Incan] creation myth of the world, there was a god named Viracocha who brought light to the world by throwing a rope around a distant star and pulling it to the earth. That image to me was really exciting. The most stunning visual in the film would have been the conclusion, where the sun is roped and pulled into this writhing mass of dark images. I was hoping it would be a mix of mythology, humor, romance. I had looked at Prisoner of Zenda as a story about a prince and his distant cousin who are dead ringers. The prince has enemies that want to kidnap him and the look-alike cousin has to stand in for him. It was also reflective of The Prince and the Pauper."
However, the concept got muddled. Producer Randy Fullmer said, "With Kingdom of the Sun, it seemed so promising at first. There were so many elements, all of which were fun and good. Yzma was terrific. Sting was doing fantastic music. But I think Roger tried to hang onto too many elements. I met a very nice woman on a plane once coming back from New York, where we'd recorded Sting. She was like, 'Oh, you work at Disney. What are you doing?' Blah, blah, blah. 'Oh, my. So, what's the movie about?' I feel like I talked until we got to Los Angeles, trying to explain it all. And I realized, Okay, this is not good. There's too much here." They tried to whittle it down, but after a screening, the powers-that-be split the team in half to come up with two different versions of the movie. After the second team's pitch was better received, Roger graciously stepped away from the project.
Then, Disney only had a year to finish the movie because of a McDonald's Happy Meal deadline. The main elements they kept were Eartha Kitt as Yzma and David Spade as Kuzco. Trudie's documentary, The Sweatbox, chronicled the entire saga, but because Disney owns it, it's never been widely released.
8. Doctor Mordrid — a 1992 superhero movie — is a pretty thinly veiled ripoff of Marvel's Doctor Strange, but that's because it was originally intended to be a Doctor Strange adaptation! Per Screen Rant, three decades before the Benedict Cumberbatch-led blockbuster, Full Moon Entertainment acquired the film rights to Doctor Strange. However, right before production was supposed to begin, the studio had a falling out with Marvel. But rather than letting everything go to waste, they quickly retooled the film into an original (though I use that term loosely) concept. A few of the starting similarities that Doctor Mordrid bears to Doctor Strange include his amulet, his Sanctum Sanctorum-esque brownstone, and his Dormammu-like antagonist, Kabal.
9. Doctor Strange isn't the only Marvel blockbuster that went through a failed planning stage. According to Screen Rant, in 1990, Universal got the film rights to Iron Man. The studio planned an adaptation led by horror director Stuart Gordon and RoboCop screenwriter Ed Neumeier. It's rumored that, in this version, Tony Stark would be coming out of retirement. However, it never made it past pre-production.
Six years later, Universal sold the film rights to Fox, who got Stan Lee on board to co-author a script with Jeff Vintar. Their version would be an origin story where Iron Man faced AIM and MODOK. Both Nicolas Cage and Tom Cruise expressed interest in playing the hero, but the project fizzled out. Iron Man went through several more failed attempts at New Line, eventually settling on a script where Tony stopped Stark Industries from making weapons, causing his dad to turn into a villain. The Notebook director Nick Cassavetes signed on, but the studio's film rights expired before anything could be set in stone.
10. According to Screen Rant, Thor: Ragnarok was initially conceived as a much darker film and would've likely revolved around the Infinity Stones (which played a key role in Avengers: Infinity War and Endgame). However, Chris Hemsworth told Vanity Fair that he was "sick" of the old Thor, and hearing filmmaker Kevin Smith criticize the Thor movies on a podcast inspired him to bring his concerns to Kevin Feige. Chris said, "Hearing someone like Smith, who represents the fanboy world, was such a kick in the ass to change gears. We sort of had nothing to lose. People didn't expect what we did with it this time around."
He told Kevin, "It has to be funnier; it has to be unpredictable. Tonally, we've just got to wipe the table again." With director Taika Waititi on board, the movie careened into a totally new direction. Instead of a dark film, it became a comedy, leaning into the talents Chris had shown in Ghostbusters and Vacation. Taika agreed with his ideas to "cut his hair" and "destroy the hammer." Chris said, "There was a sense of, 'If we're going to go out, let's go out swinging."
© Marvel / © Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures /Courtesy Everett Collection
11. Will Ferrell told The Bill Simmons Podcast, "The first version of Anchorman is basically the movie Alive, where the year is 1976, and we are flying to Philadelphia, and all the newsmen from around the country are flying in to have some big convention. Ron convinces the pilot that he knows how to fly the charter jet, and he immediately crash-lands it in the mountains. And it's just the story of them surviving and trying to get off the mountainside."
Gemma LaMana/©Paramount Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
"They clipped a cargo plane, and the cargo plane crashed as well, close to them, and it was carrying only boxes of orangutans and Chinese throwing stars. So throughout the movie, we're being stalked by orangutans who are killing, one by one, the team off with throwing stars. And Veronica Corningstone keeps saying things like, 'Guys, I know if we just head down, we'll hit civilization.' And we keep telling her, 'Wrong.' She doesn't know what we're talking about. So that was the first version of the movie," he said.
©DreamWorks/Courtesy Everett Collection
12. The original script for My Stepmother is an Alien was penned by a mysterious screenwriter known only as Jerico [Stone]. He told the LA Times, "My original script was an allegory about child abuse. I wanted to reach kids in a way that wouldn't make the story just a disease-of-the-week TV movie. And after certain incidents I'd experienced, I realized I could tell the story as a fable, a fairy tale that would make it easier for kids to grasp the child abuse angle." As a child, he was "beaten up" at school and home, and he spent a lot of time at a train station reading comics with a friend who had similar experiences. He said, "We decided to become comic superheroes and called ourselves the Black Jacks. It gave us strength...[One day] he said we couldn't do anything to stop his father because he was an alien. And he said he couldn't see me again — and he never did."
© Columbia / courtesy Everett Collection
Several years later, when Jerico was experiencing homelessness in LA, he befriended a child who told him he couldn't fight back against his abusive dad because his dad was an alien. So, Jerico followed the boy, who got into an abandoned car in a grocery store parking lot. Jerico said, "I rushed up and started kicking the car when the door opened and...It was an alien. It wasn't a man. It wasn't a person. It looked so strange, I couldn't even describe it. I just froze. The next thing I knew, this huge hand leaped out and dug into my stomach, grabbing hold of my spine. The pain was so intense I just collapsed to the ground. The alien creature stood over me and said, very gently, 'Sorry, Black Jack.' Then the car started to shimmer, very brightly, and I blacked out from the pain. When I came to, the car — and any traces of it — was gone."
©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
Shortly after, inspired by a chance encounter with Orson Wells, he started pitching a film about a kid who envisioned his step-mom as an alien. He said, "No one believes him because she's the greatest mother in public, but in private, she's totally sadistic to him. It was a very dark story." However, after Paramount picked it up, they decided it would be better as a comedy and brought in additional writers. Jerico said, "Hollywood is a doomed planet. Watching the film is like seeing someone you loved very much at one time and then seeing them much later and...They're the same person, but they look so different. So many things have happened to them. It's not the person you loved 20 years before."
©Columbia Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
13. Per Vulture, the 2010 film Robin Hood originated as Cyrus Voris and Ethan Reif's screenplay called Nottingham. It was a twist on the classic Robin Hood tale from the POV of the Sheriff of Nottingham, who was actually the good guy. Robin Hood was a jerk, and they were both involved in a love triangle with Marian.
David Appleby/©Universal / courtesy Everett Collection
However, once director Ridley Scott's involvement was publicized, the writers stopped hearing from Universal. They indirectly found out they were being replaced when they learned that the studio had an open writing assignment for Robin Hood. Both Ridley and lead actor Russell Crowe were opposed to making the Sheriff the protagonist, so screenwriter Brian Helgeland was hired to rewrite it into a standard Robin Hood adaptation (though another writer was hired to write a new draft before they again commissioned Brian for a final draft).
©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection
14. According to the Independent, Toy Story was initially envisioned as a feature-length version of the Pixar short Tin Toy. The original protagonist was a mechanical drummer toy who went up against a ventriloquist's dummy. However, the drummer was replaced by a "space toy" named Lunar Larry (who later became Buzz Lightyear), and the dummy became Woody, the pull-string cowboy doll and the hero of the story. After a mockup of the movie was poorly received by Disney, the writers spent months revising it.
Pixar / Via Disney+
15. According to Screen Rant, in the original plans for Toy Story 3 — which was initially going to be made by Disney's Circle 7 Animation, not Pixar — Buzz Lightyear was recalled to Taiwan, where he met other toys that had been recalled. His friends traveled across the world to save him, but he ultimately died.
Pixar / Via Disney+
16. Con Air director Simon West told Den of Geek, "The original script was much smaller than the eventual film. It was a character piece, really, by Scott Rosenberg, who did Things To Do In Denver When You're Dead and Beautiful Girls, which were very small, little indie films with great characters. Jerry [Bruckheimer] liked it, obviously, and I liked it just because of the characters and their names, like Cyrus The Virus and Diamond Dog and things like that. I thought, well, I can do something with this. But I had to make it into a big summer action movie, whereas, at the moment, it's a small character piece. So then I set about blowing it up out of all proportion, really."
©Buena Vista Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection
17. Per Uproxx, Yesterday originated as Jack Barth's screenplay Cover Version. In his version, the protagonist, Jack, was still the only person who remembered the Beatles, but their songs only got him slightly better gigs, not overnight sensationalism. Additionally, his love interest, Ellie, was his girlfriend and bandmate, not his childhood crush. However, when Richard Curtis rewrote it, the movie became a rom-com where Jack had to choose between Ellie and fame.
Jonathan Prime/Uni / ©Universal/courtesy Everett / Everett Collection
Barth told Uproxx, "I've been thinking about this a lot. And I think that the reason that Richard turned him into the most successful songwriter of all time is because that's how Richard's life is going. He met Rowan Atkinson at Oxford. He came out of Oxford and immediately rode Rowan Atkinson to huge success in his early twenties. He's never been knocked out, as far as I know. Why wouldn't this guy become the most successful songwriter in the world?" Richard, who's previously said he didn't read Barth's script and only heard the pitch, wasn't available to comment on the interview.
Jonathan Prime/Uni / ©Universal/courtesy Everett / Everett Collection
However, there's one infamous change that Yesterday made between the trailer and the release. According to Cinema Blend, an earlier cut featured Ana De Armas playing Roxanne, who was part of a love triangle with Jack and Ellie. However, that subplot didn't do well with test audiences, so it was removed. But shots of ANA still appeared in the trailer. In 2022, two of Ana's fans infamously sued Universal in a federal class action suit, alleging the trailer used "false, misleading, and deceptive" marketing to get them to rent to movie on Amazon Prime. Per THR, the suit was later settled out of court.
Universal Pictures / Via youtube.com
18. In its original form, Galaxy Quest was titled Captain Starshine. Producer Mark Johnson's scouts weren't impressed with the screenplay itself, but they loved the logline — what if aliens mistake an old Star Trek -esque show as "historical documents" and seek out the crew of out-of-work actors for help when their planet is threatened? So, it was completely rewritten by a different screenwriter. Mark told MTV News, "The original David Howard draft of Captain Starshine — very few people have ever read that. The original concept was brilliant, but we needed someone like a Bob Gordon to take it from there."
©DreamWorks/Courtesy Everett Collection
19. When Andrew Niccol first wrote The Truman Show, he "did envisage something darker." He told The Hollywood Reporter, "In the original script, there was an innocent passenger attacked on the subway as a way to test Truman's courage, and Truman had a platonic relationship with a prostitute who he dressed as Sylvia...I always thought the premise was bullet-proof, and even though the original draft is set in an alternate version of New York City — if you can fake it there, you can fake it anywhere — I was happy to embrace [director Peter Weir's] more idyllic, small-town take on a counterfeit world."
(c)Paramount / courtesy Everett Collection
20. The Lost Boys co-screenwriter told the Guardian, "I'd read Interview With the Vampire by Anne Rice and was inspired by the little girl, Claudia, trapped in the body of a five-year-old for eternity. It got me thinking about JM Barrie's Peter Pan – where our title came from. What if the reason he came out at night, could fly, and didn't grow up was because he was a vampire? We took a fictional character and put him in a new light. What if it wasn't all goodness and there was some evil intent? Warner Bros paid us $375,000 for the script. About a year later, we had a meeting with [original director, later executive producer] Richard Donner about rewrites. It was brutal."
©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection
"We had designed the film to be a boy's adventure, set in a time before sex rears its head. But that's not what the studio wanted. Donner wanted the boys to be old enough to drive. What he meant was old enough to fuck. He also wanted Star – whom we'd written as a boy – to change sex and be the love interest. He was turning our story into a teenage vampire movie. Once we sold the script, it was out of our hands," he said.
©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection
21. When Mario Puzo first showed Al Pacino his script for The Godfather Part II, he warned him that it was "crap." Al told Fresh Air,"He said, 'I just want you to know before you read it, they want to do it, and that this is crap.' And I read it, and he was right. It was not good. And so I just thought, well — and they kept upping the ante. They kept giving me more money. And I kept saying, 'But I don't want to do it.' And then finally, when Francis [Ford Coppola] — because Francis wasn't on the project. So Francis got on the project. And he cut them off at about 700,000. He said, 'No, he doesn't want money. He wants a good script. Stop giving him the money.'" He said that, after Coppola's rewrites, "It was a great script."
Paramount Pictures courtesy Everett Collection
22. And finally, according to Cinema Blend, the original script for Being John Malkovich was even weirder. Instead of Craig turning John Malkovich into a renowned puppeteer, he turned the actor into a puppet, with himself as the puppeteer. They got a Vegas show where they juggled chainsaws and performed scenes from On the Waterfront. Then, a rival puppeteer called The Great Mantini (whose puppet looked like President Truman) challenged them to an onstage puppetry duel where they performed the play Equus. However, the Devil, who wanted his followers to take possession of John in a world domination plot, possessed the Truman puppet and made it perform unbelievable tricks, ending by turning into a swan and catching fire. The real President Truman rose from the ashes and told the audience to vote for his puppeteer to win the duel.
©USA Films/Courtesy Everett Collection
Following his defeat, Craig abandoned John, who was taken over by the Devil's followers. Flying over NYC, John made everyone in the world dance until their deaths. In the twist ending, it was revealed that The Great Mantini has actually been in control of Craig, but Mr. Flemmer has been pulling Mantini's strings.
©USA Films/Courtesy Everett Collection
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A few drinks deep at the Blue Farm Café, a troubled, frustrated Paul reveals to Joe (Raymond Ablack) that he and Georgia slept together pre-divorce, even amidst their conflicts. Joe by this, to say the least. Which is fair! He and Georgia also slept together recently. But, uh, more on that later. Eventually, Paul is recalled as mayor and Wellsbury rejects Prop 38. Paul lays the blame for these political failures at Georgia's feet. When she goes to his office to return her ring and apologize for lying about the pregnancy, he insists she's made him into something ugly, ethically warped, and (as we saw earlier this season) potentially violent. Georgia isn't having any of it. 'I didn't make you anything that wasn't in there already,' she insists. Meanwhile, Ginny must deal with an interpersonal reckoning of her own. She wants to believe her mother's changed, that Tom was Georgia's last murder victim. But Ginny isn't sure she believes Georgia can change, and even if she can, Ginny has already changed herself. She's now wrapped up in her mother's crimes, implicated in them in a real and irrevocable way. Austin, too. When Georgia eventually learns Ginny blackmailed Cynthia (Sabrina Grdevich) in order to implicate Gil, she's furious. 'That's not on you, to do things like that,' she demands, adding later, 'I do hard things so you don't have to.' 'It's what got you out,' Ginny replies, almost nonchalant. 'It's what you would've done.' Georgia does not like this answer. Concludes Ginny, 'I did what I had to. Prove that I did the right make me regret setting you free.' Finally, she drops this zinger: 'We carry the weight, too. We always have.' She's referring, of course, to herself and Austin. Georgia's crimes have always impacted her kids, regardless of whether she wanted or intended them to do so. That's parenting for you! As she attempts to ground herself after so much emotional turmoil, Ginny leans on Marcus (Felix Mallard), but he doesn't have much grounding to offer. He has a serious drinking problem, deepened by his depression, and even if he still loves Ginny—as he insists he does, moments before they embrace—love alone won't be enough to pull him out of such a deep hole. His twin sister, Maxine (Sara Waisglass), seems to understand this fact, and she begs for their parents to send Marcus to rehab. But their mother, Ellen (Jennifer Robertson), doesn't want him to fall behind his friends in school, thus 'making it worse.' It might already be too late for that. Marcus has failed his sophomore year. Later, after Ginny performs her latest poem for the school, he lies to her about why he was called to the principal's office. It isn't until later, when he's drunkenly stumbling around their friend's basement house party, that Ginny realizes the seriousness of his that he's already covering it up. Max drags Marcus reluctantly home, where he gets into a shouting match with his parents before devolving into sobs, insisting on how much he hates himself. After the Bakers put their son to bed, Ginny climbs through his bedroom window to insist he's not a 'loser.' Marcus, still wasted, wants her to read him her 'Sunshine' poem—the one she says she wrote about him. But before she can do so, he wets the bed. Ellen then comes in with a glass of water and politely asks Ginny to leave. In tears, Ginny obeys. The next morning, we watch Ellen driving Marcus somewhere. (Given his pissed-off reaction, I think we can safely assume it's rehab.) Only after Ellen asks for silence does he realize Ginny has secretly tucked the 'Sunshine' poem in his bag. He reads it as they drive away from Wellsbury, and it reminds him he's still 'there, somewhere' deep inside himself. While Marcus heads to rehab, Ginny prepares herself to spend the summer in Korea with Zion. But what that means for Austin and Georgia remains to be seen. Georgia is clearly falling for Joe—or, anyway, she wants to, as evidenced by her finally confessing to the Blue Farm Café owner that she did, indeed, kill Tom. She tells Joe she feels safe with him, like she can be the 'real me,' which means she can be honest and upfront about the multiple (yes, multiple) murders. Joe accepts the 'Mayoress Murderess' for who she is, and they kiss. But Georgia insists they can't be together, at least for a while. She just got a divorce; her murder trial just wrapped up. She needs to get settled. She needs some stability for her kids. And though she doesn't see them out her front window, her mother and stepdad have apparently landed in Wellsbury, joyriding past the Millers' house in their truck. We can only imagine what drama that implies for season 4. Oh, but the twists don't stop there, friends. Especially after last season's finale plot twist, Ginny & Georgia would never end season 3 on such a simple note. No, we instead must witness Georgia stroll through the kitchen guzzling milk from a carton. As Ginny watches, it hits her suddenly: 'Didn't you say you drink milk when you're pregnant?' she asks her mother. Sure enough, Georgia is having a baby. A real one, not a fake one! And who's the father? We can't yet know for sure. It's a classic soap-opera plot twist. But, hey, it works. Already, Ginny & Georgia season 3 has hit the No. 1 spot on the Netflix Top 10 list. The Miller girls might not have much experience with honesty, but when it comes to drama, they know exactly what they're doing.


CNBC
8 hours ago
- CNBC
Why Disney and Universal are investing billions into their theme parks
The Walt Disney Company and Universal, two of the biggest names in theme parks, are both undertaking historic expansions to their experiences businesses. Universal Orlando Resort in May opened the gates to Epic Universe, its fourth theme park at its flagship resort. Epic cost an estimated $7 billion to build, according to numbers provided by the University of Central Florida. Brian Roberts, Chairman and CEO of Universal parent company Comcast, called it the "single-largest investment Comcast NBCUniversal has made in its theme park business". "It's so different than anything else that we've ever built, but certainly I think it's different than anything anyone's ever built," said Karen Irwin, Universal Orlando President and COO. Epic's opening coincides with an expansion of Universal Orlando's resort portfolio, adding three Loews hotels to bring its total to 11 operated on the property. Universal is betting that the addition of Epic will turn the resort into a full-week destination, a distinction that is normally reserved for its crosstown neighbor, Walt Disney World. Not to be upstaged, Disney is working on a historic undertaking of its own. In 2023, Disney announced plans to invest $60 billion in its experiences segment, which includes theme parks, cruise ships and consumer products. Of that investment, $30 billion will go to its domestic theme parks, Disney World and Disneyland. "We've got a lion's share of that investment coming to us," said Michael Hundgen, portfolio executive creative producer with Walt Disney Imagineering. "It's about finding what strikes the best creative intent in the most value oriented way possible." These investments come at a time when both Disney and Comcast are paring down or spinning off their linear TV segments, an arena that has seen volatility in recent years. By comparison, theme parks have been consistent revenue drivers for the companies in the post-COVID tourism bounce. However, the timing of these openings and expansions could prove challenging for both theme parks. Epic's opening summer coincides with fears of a travel slowdown due to economic volatility. "If you're uncertain how the economy is going to develop, then you're going to try to be more cautious in your spending," said Jorge Ridderstaat, associate professor at UCF's Rosen College of Hospitality Management.