Two Star movies that you really really like

I’ll go with A Knight’s Tale and the first Tomb Raider.

One of my girlfriend’s favourites. She once commented on how much swearing a different movie had and I zinged her with “Wait a sec, your favourite movie is LKG which has so much swearing there’s even a scene in it commenting on how much swearing there is!”
:smiley:

Several of the ones already listed are on my list, including:

Mystery Men
Galaxy Quest
Super Troopers
Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure/Bogus Journey
Tremors

I would also like to add:

Titan A.E.
PCU
Cube

My favorites are Con Air and Deep Rising. No matter what, if either of those movies shows up on a lazy Saturday, I watch till the end. Those are some good movies.

Many many good pick here, so I will just add a few of my favorites:

The Rundown

LifeForm, an excellent sci-fi movie which may well be impossible to find.

any **Evil Dead ** movie

Ravenous

The Thing (ok, I dunno if that’s really 2 star…)

I don’t think either of those movies is a two-star.

Tank Girl. What’s not to love? The Busby Berkeley Dance sequence in the brothel alone is enough to win me over.

I love so many of the movies already listed:
Overboard
Pitch Black
Chronicles of Riddick
Zoolander

Not Another Teen Movie
Little Nicky

Legend
The Corrupter*
The Cutting Edge*
House of Cards
Running Man*
Intolerable Cruelty
Blast From the Past
Better Off Dead
Galaxy Quest
Mystery Men*
They Live
Super Troopers*
The Blood of Heroes*
The Rock*
Baseketball
Groundhogs Day*
Long Kiss Goodnight
Romy and Michelle’s High School Reunion
A Knight’s Tale*
Die Hard**
The starred ones are the ones I own. I’d also like to add Hellboy to the list.

Desperately Seeking Susan

Bedazzled (with Brendan Frasier and Elizabeth Hurley)

I think a lot of the movies in this thread aren’t two star movies. I just glanced at the TV listings on my homepage and found movies like this were two stars:

Troop Beverly Hills (1989)
39 FAM: Wednesday, February 1 8:00 PM
1989, PG, **, 01:45, Color, English, United States,

An idle rich woman’s (Shelley Long) husband (Craig T. Nelson) challenges her to lead their daughter’s troop of campers.

Danielle Steel’s Message From Nam (1993)
65 LMN: Wednesday, February 1 4:15 PM
1993, NR, **, 03:12, Color, English, United States, Made for TV

Love and war surround a Berkeley graduate (Jenny Robertson) as she writes a column from Vietnam.

Dead Before Dawn (1993)
65 LMN: Wednesday, February 1 7:55 PM
1993, NR, **, 01:36, Color, English, United States, Made for TV

The FBI asks a Texas mother (Cheryl Ladd) to fake her own death in order to trap her husband (Jameson Parker) who wants her dead.
I don’t know where Excite’s TV listings get their ratings, but these movies sound really bad.

Point Break

IMDB has it as 6.5 out of 10 stars.

Concrete Blond music, great filming … err… umm….cinematography (IMHO).

Patrick Swayze
Keanu Reeves (‘Johnny’ Utah) :snerk:
Gary Busey

And umm. Lori Petty. She was really cute in the movie. I love the way her voice cracks.

The FBI goes after a bunch of bank robbing surfers. What more could you want :smiley:

I think it’s fun. My Wife hates it.[sub]but she bought me the dvd[/sub]

Yeesh. My jokes have a tendency to mis-fire like that.

I guess I should have said: A Star is Born and A Star is Born.

I could put some of my favorite non-blockbusters up for consideration, but I don’t have the motivation to look up whether Leaving Normal, and Always, and Edward Scissorhands, and Fifty First Dates, and Love, Actually, and Sense and Sensibility are justly considered two-star movies by people in the know. 'Cause I enjoy them so much that I give them four stars.

So Dark Star and Stars Fell on Alabama is the way to go, for me.

Some two-stars are pretty bad. Some are pretty good. Most are just average. But some of them, for whatever reason, just reach out and grab you. Also, I’ve noticed that the ratings can change over time. At least, I’ve seen that happen on the Time Warner schedule (which they probably buy from somewhere else.)

One more that I might add is Dave. I’m not a big fan of Kline, but it was a pretty good movie.

Oh, and also King Ralph.

Now, that’s a good wife! :slight_smile:

I just turned on The Blues Brothers on AMC and found that in the blurb it has been given two stars!

Never fear – no way is Sense and Sensibility only a two-star movie! Won Emma Thompson the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay, and also the Golden Globe I believe. Of course it all depends on which critic / newspaper one is using as a barometer. Movies I’m guessing as 2-star flicks that I nonetheless enjoy include:

Zorro, the Gay Blade – extremely silly comedy. George Hamilton is terrific in dual roles, and Ron Liebman’s hilariously over-the-top turn as the Alcalde never fails to elicit a grin.

You’ve Got Mail - Tom Hanks & Meg Ryan are so freakin’ likeable as performers. Also, it does a great job of showing the charm of small bookstores and the people who love 'em. I dig the soundtrack, too. (Here’s a heresy: I like it much better than the classic movie on which it’s based, Shop Around the Corner.)

About Last Night - Trashy late 1980s “romance” featuring two immature, poorly matched twentysomethings (Demi Moore & Rob Lowe). Based on the play Sexual Perversity in Chicago. by David Mamet. I have no idea why this movie sucks me in – maybe it’s 'cause Demi Moore has such an awesome wardrobe in it, or maybe 'cause it’s just SO 1980s.

The In-Laws - The original version, with Peter Falk and Alan Arkin. Another silly farce, but Falk and Arkin are brilliant foils as (respectively) a man who’s either a CIA agent working undercover or an *ex-*CIA agent fired for being a paranoid nutcase, and the overcautious dentist who gets caught up in Falk’s bizarre scheme to bring down a South American dictator (Richard Libertini).

The Negotiator - Sam Jackson plays Sam Jackson, I mean Danny Roman, a hostage negotiator who himself takes hostages when he’s framed for stealing from the police pension fund. Or something. I never fully understood the scheme as it’s unravelled. Anyway, it’s a fairly predictable yet quirky action/thriller significantly improved by Kevin Spacey as the smart, intense, unpredictable colleague who’s the only guy Jackson’s willing to negotiate with. Filled with terrific character actors in smallish roles – J.T. Walsh, John Spencer, Ron Rifkin, David Morse, Paul Giamatti, Regina Taylor, and Paul Guilfoyle.

Gotta support the love for Galaxy Quest too.

Adventures in Babysitting.

Better Off Dead, and it’s sibling film: One Crazy Summer. Very campy, but fun.

I’ve got Dave on LD, thank you.

The Rocketeer. Well, first off how can one object to another chance to drool over Jennifer Connelly? But while the history, and the attitude towards the Mob annoy the Hell out of me, it’s still a fun movie. (Another I’ve got on LD)

The Dark Crystal. Really, it’s very cheesy, but it’s got some fun parts, too. Besides, even when he didn’t quite hit his target, Jim Henson is still a better director than many still killing celluloid.

I really dislike “Shop Around the Corner.” Margaret Sullavan is so freaking shrill. She’s horrible.

There. I’ll burn at the stake, too.

Re. Water, listed by silenus – I actually rented this one once! Essential viewing for George Harrison completists, as he performed in it with Ringo Starr and Eric Clapton and was the film’s exec. producer, via his boutique production company, Handmade Films, which would make Withnail & I the following year. I haven’t seen all of George’s movies, but he had a quirky sensibility and a sharp ear for well-written satires and farces.

Come to think about it, I checked out Water years before discovering Withnail & I, and the former experience didn’t deter me from checking out the latter, so I must be a real oddball. :slight_smile:
As for my picks, according to my local paper’s TV schedule, *The Jerk * was a two-star movie. Yes, The Jerk. One of the gonzo-est, funniest movies of its era, and probably the best thing Steve Martin’s ever done, it’s left its mark on me. (“Oh, so it’s a profit deal!” is one of my catch-phrases.)

Red Dawn was pilloried by critics for its absurd and paranoid right-wing premise, but it rather endearingly takes its WTF?!? story seriously, with the ensuing plot mechanics, melodramas, and body count unfolding logically and grimly from that point onwards. Some otherwise very socially-lefty friends of mine love it, warts and all.

While You Were Sleeping is a rom-com with a two-star rap, earned in all likelihood for its surreal socio-economic landscape, with Sandra Bullock’s Chicago MTA clerk in the ultimate brain-dead job and a suspiciously nice apartment in a decent neighborhood. (Then again, her character was an orphan, so maybe she inheirited some money.) Her initial romantic pairing is a meet-cute farce combining elements of heroism and the red-herring sap’s conveniently being tucked away in a coma, during which she engages in classic screwball fashion with the sap’s totally endearing and deserving brother. Their courtship remains constrained and chaste until her farcically aborted nuptials, during which All Is Revealed, paving the way for her legitimate wedding to the Decent Brother. Even better than the plot turns is the on-screen chemistry between Bullock and Bill Pullman; this is the rare rom-com with realistic, likeable characters sharing a believable attraction. Even the secondary characters, all quirkily likeable, burnish the holiday glow. Shakespeare would’ve recognized the plot mechanics, if not the El – or for that matter, Christmas as celebrated in America’s suburbia.

I love this movie. I don’t care how silly it is, the romance feels real.

And I didn’t think her apartment seemed very nice. It’s been a while since I saw it, though.