The global coronavirus pandemic has resulted in the cancellation or postponement of a lot of film and entertainment industry events, which is a crushing feeling for industry professionals and followers. One such event that had to be canceled was the Telluride Film Festival, which just recently released its 2020 lineup.

Variety reports that festival organizers have released the titles of the films that would have been part of the 2020 festival had the global coronavirus pandemic had not forced its cancellation. The films include Chloe Zao’s Nomadland, Roger Mitchell’s The Duke, the Idris Elba-starrer Concrete Cowboy, and Ammonite, starring Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan.

Rather than premiering at Telluride, the four films will now be doing so at either the Venice Film Festival or the Toronto Film Festival. Nomadland, in fact, will debut at the Venice Film Festival. The film will also have a simultaneous screening at the Toronto International Film Festival, with another screening planned at the New York Film Festival.

Before the announcement of its cancellation, The Hollywood Reporter says organizers of the Telluride Film Festival had been planning a festival that took the global coronavirus pandemic into account. Some of the measures organizers had in place were socially distanced screenings, new HVAC systems, and COVID-19 tests in the thousands.

Organizers had also added Telluride’s Town Park as an outdoor screening venue while also removing the Telluride Library as a screening venue since it is too small to be able to implement a socially distanced screening. The guest director program was also removed since it required face-to-face time.

However, Telluride Film Festival executive director Julie Huntsinger chose to cancel the festival instead after the spike of coronavirus cases in states like Texas, Arizona, and California, as well as the increasingly political debates that were being had about the wearing of masks.

Aside from the four mentioned films, Telluride was also going to feature a number of documentaries, such as Sam Pollard’s MLK/FBI, Dawn Porter’s The Way I See It, and Liz Garbuz and Lisa Cortes’s All In: The Fight for Democracy.

Film festivals that have decided to move forward like the Venice Film Festival have had to radically change their setups to adapt to the global coronavirus pandemic. The Venice Film Festival has scrapped its Sconfini section this year, as well as moved its Venice Classics section to the Il Cinema Ritrovato festival to be held this month.

Any industry event that will push through this year will have to contend with the still-raging global coronavirus pandemic. According to the World Health Organization’s situation report for Aug. 3, there are now 17,918,582 confirmed COVID-19 cases around the world. Deaths caused by COVID-19 are now at 686,703 people.