长沙稳定汇率USDT|【唯一TG:@heimifeng8】|飞机盗号软件API破解技术✨谷歌搜索留痕排名,史上最强SEO技术,20年谷歌SEO经验大佬✨Netflix's most expensive movie seems to be a disaster

Netflix has sunk hundreds of millions into its new film, The Electric State, but its prospects for a return on investment are bleak. Reviews of the film are overwhelmingly negative, calling it a waste of money, BI reports.
The Electric State is a retro-futuristic film set in the 1990s. Millie Bobby Brown plays Michelle, an orphaned teenager who embarks on a journey to find her long-lost brother, Christopher, after a robot uprising. She is joined by a smuggler named Keats (Chris Pratt) and his assistant, a robot named Herman (voiced by Anthony Mackie).
This sci-fi film was directed by filmmaking brothers Joe and Anthony Russo.
At the time of publication, the film has a critics' score of 17% from 69 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, suggesting that Netflix may have miscalculated its latest big push.
The Electric State's budget was reported to be between $300 million and $320 million. To put this into further context, the last 10 Best Picture Oscar winners collectively had reported budgets under $230 million.
This film is inspired by Simon Stålenhag's 2025 illustrated novel of the same name. However, calling it based on the novel would be a stretch, as the film completely recycles elements of the book.
Critics have called it "soulless," with "stupidly repetitive" action sequences. Brown and Pratt, who have delivered impressive performances in Stranger Things and the Marvel Cinematic Universe, respectively, fail to bring any spark to The Electric State.
The Observer's Dylan Roth deemed it a "stupid, unfunny action movie for kids," and the latest casualty of the trend of "incomprehensibly expensive streaming movies that feel designed by an algorithm and thrown together in a factory."