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Media & EntertainmentTuesday, June 23, 2026

The Biopic That Never Was: Madonna on Budgets, Belief, and a Serbian Standoff

After Universal balked at the budget for her self-directed biopic, Madonna tried to reshape it for Netflix, only to return to music with a new album and a cameo from the actress once cast as her.

In the final moments of Madonna’s new music video for “Bring Your Love”, a familiar face flickers across the screen: Julia Garner, dressed in period eighties attire, appears in a wordless cameo. It is a ghostly trace of a far larger role. Garner was, until recently, the officially anointed actress set to play the Queen of Pop in a long-gestating biopic that Madonna herself was to co-write and direct. That film is now dead, and its unmaking, laid out by Madonna in a candid interview with Interview magazine, reveals a story of budget brinkmanship, bruised belief, and a script held hostage by studio accounting.

The project, first secured by Universal Pictures after a heated studio auction in 2021, unravelled over a single, irreconcilable question: money. “I’ve had an extraordinary life,” Madonna told the magazine. “I’ve had a huge life, so I needed a big budget.” Universal, she said, “couldn’t get their heads around” the figure. In an attempt to break the impasse, she proposed shooting in Serbia to slash costs. The studio’s response, as she recounts it, was a blunt expression of disbelief: “We don’t believe you’d stay in Serbia more than four days.” Her retort — “Did you read the script?” — underscored a deeper chasm. For Madonna, the trip was not a holiday; her entire existence, she insisted, had been a battle for survival. The studio, unconvinced, walked away, leaving the singer, by her own description, “in limbo”.

What followed was a second act of frustration. Netflix approached her to transform the biopic into a limited series, but the transition proved labyrinthine. The script she had spent two years writing with Universal was legally tethered to the studio; to use it, she would have had to buy it back “for an extortionist’s price, even though I wrote it.” She started from scratch, meeting waves of writers and searching for a showrunner who could match her vision. After eight or nine months, no one had clicked. The series, too, was shelved. Throughout the ordeal, the casting of Garner — chosen after an intensive audition process that had made industry headlines — remained a spectral presence, a promise never fulfilled.

Madonna did what she has done for four decades: she returned to the recording studio. The result is Confessions on a Dance Floor: Part II, a sequel to her 2005 album, produced with Stuart Price and set for release on 3 July. The lead video, featuring Sabrina Carpenter, is a disco-lit affirmation of dance as escape, and it is there that Garner materialises, not as the young Madonna but as a fleeting apparition in the crowd. “Good thing I have another job,” Madonna remarked, “because I need to work, I need to create.” The biopic remains unmade; the actress once cast to embody her is now a cameo in a music video. The story of a life too large for a single budget has, for now, found its only screen in a four-minute clip.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 4 languages

62%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Southeast Asian pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Southeast Asian press
PragmatismTriumph

A family rift became a creative breakthrough when the pop icon's daughter suggested they write a song together to mend their bond. The resulting collaboration evolved into a deeply personal album, marking a fresh artistic direction rooted in healing and maternal connection.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press
SkepticismDetachment

The long-gestating biopic collapsed after a falling-out with the studio over financial limits. The artist described a sense of limbo as the project was shelved, despite years of script work and casting. The episode underscores the difficulty of translating an extraordinary life to screen under corporate constraints.

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Upd. 01:12 PM4 languages · 4 outlets
PreviousMedia & EntertainmentNext
4 outlets|4 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Biopic That Never Was: Madonna on Budgets, Belief, and a Serbian Standoff

After Universal balked at the budget for her self-directed biopic, Madonna tried to reshape it for Netflix, only to return to music with a new album and a cameo from the actress once cast as her.

In the final moments of Madonna’s new music video for “Bring Your Love”, a familiar face flickers across the screen: Julia Garner, dressed in period eighties attire, appears in a wordless cameo. It is a ghostly trace of a far larger role. Garner was, until recently, the officially anointed actress set to play the Queen of Pop in a long-gestating biopic that Madonna herself was to co-write and direct. That film is now dead, and its unmaking, laid out by Madonna in a candid interview with Interview magazine, reveals a story of budget brinkmanship, bruised belief, and a script held hostage by studio accounting.

The project, first secured by Universal Pictures after a heated studio auction in 2021, unravelled over a single, irreconcilable question: money. “I’ve had an extraordinary life,” Madonna told the magazine. “I’ve had a huge life, so I needed a big budget.” Universal, she said, “couldn’t get their heads around” the figure. In an attempt to break the impasse, she proposed shooting in Serbia to slash costs. The studio’s response, as she recounts it, was a blunt expression of disbelief: “We don’t believe you’d stay in Serbia more than four days.” Her retort — “Did you read the script?” — underscored a deeper chasm. For Madonna, the trip was not a holiday; her entire existence, she insisted, had been a battle for survival. The studio, unconvinced, walked away, leaving the singer, by her own description, “in limbo”.

What followed was a second act of frustration. Netflix approached her to transform the biopic into a limited series, but the transition proved labyrinthine. The script she had spent two years writing with Universal was legally tethered to the studio; to use it, she would have had to buy it back “for an extortionist’s price, even though I wrote it.” She started from scratch, meeting waves of writers and searching for a showrunner who could match her vision. After eight or nine months, no one had clicked. The series, too, was shelved. Throughout the ordeal, the casting of Garner — chosen after an intensive audition process that had made industry headlines — remained a spectral presence, a promise never fulfilled.

Madonna did what she has done for four decades: she returned to the recording studio. The result is Confessions on a Dance Floor: Part II, a sequel to her 2005 album, produced with Stuart Price and set for release on 3 July. The lead video, featuring Sabrina Carpenter, is a disco-lit affirmation of dance as escape, and it is there that Garner materialises, not as the young Madonna but as a fleeting apparition in the crowd. “Good thing I have another job,” Madonna remarked, “because I need to work, I need to create.” The biopic remains unmade; the actress once cast to embody her is now a cameo in a music video. The story of a life too large for a single budget has, for now, found its only screen in a four-minute clip.

Source divergence

Media & Entertainment · 4 outlets · 4 languages

62%High

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable50%
Neutral25%
Critical25%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 4 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Southeast Asian pressAtlantic / Anglosphere press
Southeast Asian press
PragmatismTriumph

A family rift became a creative breakthrough when the pop icon's daughter suggested they write a song together to mend their bond. The resulting collaboration evolved into a deeply personal album, marking a fresh artistic direction rooted in healing and maternal connection.

Atlantic / Anglosphere press
SkepticismDetachment

The long-gestating biopic collapsed after a falling-out with the studio over financial limits. The artist described a sense of limbo as the project was shelved, despite years of script work and casting. The episode underscores the difficulty of translating an extraordinary life to screen under corporate constraints.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 4 languages

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