Last updated: March 7, 2021

Here's every movie delayed by the coronavirus pandemic so far. The disease's spread around the world has had a significant impact on not just Hollywood, but the larger entertainment industry. Last year's SXSW Film Festival, San Diego Comic-Con, E3, CinemaCon, and ACE Comic Con were all cancelled. Red carpet events were cancelled, awards shows faced substantial changes, and productions were shut down for several months before picking back up with filming.

Obviously, movie theater screenings were also no longer a thing and, for a while, studios just kept delaying a lot of films before sending them straight to streaming and on demand, or pushing back releases until 2021. The delays have shifted the way in which people watch films, with Warner Bros. releasing films simultaneously on HBO Max and in theaters, with Paramount+ primed to do something similar with a debut on the streaming service 45 days after a theatrical release.

There've been a handful of movies delayed so far, ranging from big-budget franchise films to smaller indie titles like Our Ladies. We will keep you updated, but for now, here's every major movie that's officially been pushed back.

No Time To Die

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MGM was the first studio to react to the coronavirus when it announced it would be moving No Time to Die - which serves as Daniel Craig's fifth and final time playing James Bond - back seven months from its early April release date to late November. The studio is expected to lose $30-50 million, but it's also believed they would have suffered an even bigger loss by sticking with their April date. After the push to November 2020, MGM once more delayed the film, first to April 2021 and now to October 8, 2021.

Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway

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Six days after No Time to Die was officially postponed, Sony announced it would be doing the same with Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway. Originally scheduled to open in the U.K. and other international territories on March 27 before hitting the U.S. on April 3, Peter Rabbit 2 is now slated to begin its global rollout four months later on August 7. However, that was once again changed. Peter Rabbit 2 is now slated to open on June 11, 2021.

A Quiet Place Part II

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Following speculation the film would be delayed, Paramount and John Krasinski confirmed they're pushing his monster movie sequel, A Quiet Place Part II, back from its previous March 20 release date to an as-yet unspecified month later in 2020. As the studio initially explained in their statement, "We look forward to bringing this film to audiences this year once we have a better understanding of the impact of this pandemic on the global theatrical marketplace." After a few delays, A Quiet Place Part II will now be released in theaters on May 28, 2021 before debuting on Paramount+ 45 days later.

Fast & Furious 9

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Despite series lead and producer Vin Diesel promising Fast & Furious 9 wouldn't be moved from its May 2020 release date in response to the coronavirus, the unpredictable situation has resulted in exactly that happening. Universal has now officially shifted the film back a year to April 2, 2021 (a date they'd been holding onto for Fast & Furious 10). However, that date has since changed, with Fast & Furious 9 now opening in theaters on June 25, 2021.

The Batman

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Originally scheduled for release on June 25, 2021, Matt Reeves' The Batman was pushed to October 2021 before Warner Bros. settled on a release date of March 4, 2022.