#Never back down 3 release date movie#
This Kevin Hart movie was initially moved up from January 15, 2021, to October 23, 2020, and then was pushed to April 16, 2021. Moved from fall 2020 to January 22, 2021, then Februand is now TBD.
Moved from November 6, 2020, to Februto November 5, 2021. Out Januafter moving from August 14, 2020, to January 1, 2021, then TBD. Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness Moved from October 9, 2020, to October 23, 2020, to December 18, 2020, then was removed from the 2020 calendar completely, then moved to September 17, 2021, then to February 11, 2022. Moved from December 23, 2020, to May 28, 2021, in theaters and on Disney+ Premier Access. The opening was shifted from April 10, 2020, to August 14, 2020, and then to August 21, 2020. Initially pushed from June 12, 2020, to September 25, 2020, to October 16, 2020, but is now set for August 27, 2021. Moved from March 20, 2020, to a VOD release date of May 1, 2020. Moved from July 17, 2020, to Ap, but now date is unset. Moved from March 20, 2020, to a video on-demand release. Moved from May 11, 2020, to November 6, 2020, to May 7, 2021, to Jin theaters and on Disney+ Premier Access. Out July 29, 2022, after being moved off of the schedule from December 22, 2021. Moved from October 2, 2020, to Ap, then to August 13, 2021. Moved from September 4, 2020, to August 27, 2021. The next four Avatar movies will debut every other December beginning December 16, 2022, with Avatar 2, delayed one year from December 17, 2021. Moved from May 29, 2020, to June 12, 2020, and it will premiere on Disney+ instead of in theaters. Out October 29, 2021, after moving from April 17, 2020, to February 19, 2021. Moved from April 24, 2020, to August 20, 2020, to September 18, 2020, on demand. With all that in mind, here’s a guide to the movies that have been delayed so far because of COVID-19, with new release dates listed where available. No Time to Die, Avatar 2, and West Side Story are also dancing to new dates, and Disney has relegated three of its films to streaming debuts. While many smaller films that had day-and-date theatrical and on-demand debuts have proceeded with the digital parts of those releases, tentpole movies out of Marvel and The Fast saga, to name just a few, have been reshuffled and moved countless times to 2021, 2022, or are being delayed indefinitely. Thanks, Tenet !) China made the decision to shut down movie theaters as far back as January 2020 in an effort to contain the virus, and prominent production companies have also closed down indefinitely. (Or, now in some states and other parts of the world, gradual cinema reopenings.
Welcome to the new normal: Movie studios are still scrambling to shift large chunks of their film releases in response to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and cinema closures. Photo: Nicole Dove/United Artists Releasing