The Mad Butcher. Viennese butcher Victor Buono accidentally kills his wife after being released from a mental hospital. To cover up the crime, he turns her into sausages that he sells to the public. Nosy neighbors soon become charcuterie as well.
Shown in the US under the title Meat Is Meat, this one really is played for laughs.
Was just working my way down the thread to post this; silly premise and not great acting, but still laughed a lot at it. And the T-Rex had all the best scenes…
Sounds rather like Eating Raoul. Definitely a black comedy, starring Paul Bartel and Mary Woronov. But the same basic idea; somebody accidentally dies by their hand, and then a few more do (as I recall, their eventual weapon of choice was a cast-iron frying pan to the head), and the victims all end up as dinner.
But Eating Raoul might be more appropriate in the “Forgotten Movies” thread, as it wasn’t bad at all. A little weird and warped, but not bad at all.
No mention so far of Blood Beach (1981)? Some sort of monster lives under the sand of Venice and/or Santa Monica beaches, and likes to drag unsuspecting people under the sand and eat them. Had the memorable tag line of, “Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water … now you can’t get to it.” It would make an awesome double-bill if it was paired with Night of the Lepus.
I thought the young actress playing Bunny, Karen Waldron (yes I had to look that up), was cute as a button. I remember her from Return of the Killer Tomatoes and the last thing I saw her in was Space Cowboys with Clint Eastwood and James Garner.
I thought the first had many hilarious parts but the 2nd was trying a bit too hard. I still laughed though.
My wife thinks I quote the first too much. She doesn’t like milk/cream in her coffee, but it doesn’t stop me from asking every few months. “Who wants cream? Nobody? Ok, no cream.”
I hate this movie so much! Mostly because I read the Zelazny novel when it came out about 10 years earlier and my first thought was “This would make a great movie”. If filmed more faithfully, it would have been Mad Max two years before Mad Max was released.
As far as bad movies that are soo bad they are good, I’ll nominate The Pirate Movie, which took two 70’s teen stars (Kristy McNicol and Christoper Atkins) and remade Gilbert & Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance, with all new music. It’s as awful as it sounds. But the cast is so engaging and seem to be having so much fun (a lot of 4th wall breaking), that I ended up loving it.
It actually did quite well at the box office. The problem was it cost 70% of what they earned back. Made today they would have used wave pools and green screen and it would be much much cheaper. Although Spielberg warned them against open water filming, they did it anyways, and of course encountered every problem Jaws had, but like 10x bigger.
Geostorm was the funniest movie I’ve seen in years. Watched it on a plane and laughed my ass off. It’s not a comedy.
Joe Dirt is not a good movie. It knows it’s not a good movie. Somehow that makes it even more endearing.
Caveman was a silly farcical comedy, of course, but that’s a perfectly valid thing for a comedy to be, and that’s what it was trying to be. It was a good movie that happened to be good at being silly.
Add to the list: Rampage, with Dwayne Johnson. It was exactly as good as you’d expect from a movie that was based on a plotless video game about giant monsters fighting and competing to destroy a city. And everyone involved knew that, and leaned into it, and just had fun with it.
Legion - demons attack a roadside diner full of strangers. Paul Bettany is the archangel Michael, come to rescue humanity’s last hope. Makes a good double feature with Priest, also starring Bettany and directed by the same guy.
Pirate Movie was a favorite of mine when it came out, and being about 12yo at the time I had a massive crush on Kristy McNicol. I recently rewatched and, while the movie overall was clunky, the cast really did shine and made it fun to watch. I was surprised that, for ostensibly being marketed as a kids movie, the dialogue was packed with sexual entendres and wordplay that would probably push it into R rating today.