‘Coyote vs. Acme’ Back From the Dead? Ketchup Makes Bid to Acquire Scrapped Project

The film was axed by Warner Bros. and is assumed to be part of a multimillion dollar tax write-down

Coyote-vs-Acme-warner-bros
Will Forte and the Coyote in Coyote vs. Acme (Credit: Warner Bros.)

Could “Coyote vs. Acme” live to see another day?

The live-action/hybrid is in the process of being sold to Ketchup Entertainment, the company that just put out another abandoned Warner Bros./”Looney Tunes” project “The Day the Earth Blew Up,” for around $50 million. (When we saw that film at Annecy last year, we trumpeted that it proved the viability of big-screen “Looney Tunes” features.) The deal has yet to be finalized but should it go through, “Coyote vs. Acme” would likely be released in 2026.

Based on a 1990 New Yorker piece by Ian Frazier and directed by Dave Green, “Coyote vs. Acme” was originally slated to be released on July 21, 2023, before being pulled from the schedule. “Barbie” took its place on the calendar and became a phenomenon. By the end of the year, it had been shopped around to various studios, some of whom had shown decided interest (Paramount even floated a hybrid theatrical/streaming release), but Warner Bros. had wanted a much higher number than most were comfortable with. A source close to Warner Bros. insists that the Ketchup deal was the first real offer they’d had for “Coyote vs. Acme.”

Early in 2024, the filmmakers were being told that the movie was effectively going to be deleted. A month after our reporting of the situation, Warner Bros. Discovery declared a $115 million write-down on a project that they refused to identify but most assumed was “Coyote vs. Acme.” (Warner Bros. declared similar write-downs for the nearly complete live-action “Batgirl” movie and an animated “Scoob” sequel.)

But the filmmakers persisted.

Currently, the “Looney Tunes” are in an odd place for Warner Bros. They continue to be the mascot of the company, as they always have been, but the original animated shorts were just removed from Max and “The Day the Earth Blew Up” was released by Ketchup. The opening weekend of the feature netted more than $5 million worldwide. This next acquisition would be a huge deal for Ketchup, even though it is lower than what Warner Bros. originally wanted from “Coyote vs. Acme.”

Comments