I saw Cocktail with Tom Cruise. It was the only thing playing at the theater near my parent’s house in the 'burbs before they built a 4-screener at another mall. I don’t think I’ll ever fully recover.
::sits in corner hugging his knees rocking back and forth staring blankly::
I apparently have no luck in choosing movies to go see. I usually just hit the movies when I have nothing better to do.
I will regularly hit the $1 movie theater here in town. Never have I gotten my money’s worth.
I actually paid $1 to see **Weekend at Bernie’s 2, Gremlins 2, Don’t Tell Mom the Babysitter’s Dead, Fear, ** (with Mark Wahlberg) and that crappy movie where Jennifer Aniston falls in love with her gay best friend after she finds out she’s pregnant. (It was so bad that I have blocked the name.) Granted, these were never highly recommended movies, but for some reason I was drawn to them.
I like going to bad movies with a bunch of friends, though. (i.e. all the Friday the 13th movies…) I went to see the last one with friends, and we were the only people in the theater… Perfect time for a little MST3K action.
I remember I once dated a girl in and on our first nihgt out we went to see Hudson Hawk.
I don’t think ther ever was a second date, and to this day I blame Bruce Willis.
Although I have to admit that he has made a lot of decent movies since.
P.S. Very few people (and critics) get that Starship Troopers is supposed to be a satire. To quote the director, “When we show people in Gestapo uniforms, we are saying that they are bad.”
I agree, Highlander II is probably the worst movie. But HEAVY was probably the most boring movie. I personally think someone said “Why are there so many movies about people who are interesting or doing interesting things? Why don’t we rebel and show boring people doing NOTHING. That’ll b enew and different!”
GOD, by the end I wished I had something interesting to do like watch paint dry.
I paid a dollar to see** Quest For Fire** 'round about 1983 and I’m still not over the thought that I paid a whole dollar and wasted 100 minutes of my life AND I paid a dollar to do it.
Yes, I’m still bitter.
Some truly horrid movies have been mentioned here, and you all deserve credit for owning up to having seen some of this crap, but you’ve missed the target. Hands down, without a doubt, to the point that Ike should close the thread now, the worst movie ever made was
There’s Something About Mary
All the critics - whom I normally take with a grain of salt anyway - RAVED about this peanut encrusted turd. Then, several of my friends - whose opinions I normally trust - talked about this smegma drip with such glee that they actually went into giggle fits talking about scenes or even mentioning lines.
I went to see it. I sat like a father watching his little girl get run over by a truck for an hour and a half as the people around me howled with laughter. I didn’t even smile, much less laugh. No worse movie has ever been made, scripted or even imagined. Gods, it was not funny. It was moronic drivel that should have resulted in jail time for the director and cast. All this, and I LIKE low humor, for crying out loud.
By the way, there was no Highlander II. It’s a myth.
That’s it. Y’all are NOT getting invited to my next GWTW pawty. Hmmmph! <–done in my Scarlett O’hara voice
Worst movies I’ve ever paid to see:
Pacific Heights - don’t know what was more tedious: the unbelievably stupid plot or Melanie Griffith’s Minnie Mouse voice.
In Dreams - I felt embarrassed for the actors. Horror films done badly end up being unintentional comedies.
Eyes Wide Shut - Yeah, yeah, Stanley Kubrick is a cinematic genius. And my grandma could make a movie more erotic than this piece of dung. BONG! <–that’s the sound of me striking a piano key.
ahhHAHAHAHAHaHaHaa!!!
This movie more than sucked…it swallowed! However…I made out with my high school sweetheart in the back of her van at the drive-in during this, so it wasn’t a total loss.
I would say Battlefield Earth but we knew that would be horribly bad and went just to see how bad it was. It did not disappoint, and it’s one of my favorite bad movies (I even have the DVD).
So I will have to say it was Pearl Harbor. It got bad reviews. I knew from the first preview I saw that it would be bad. I held out very little hope that it would have any redeeming qualities whatsoever. Why did I see it? I have no clue. I guess on one level I was curious (much like with Battlefield Earth). On another level, I guess I just couldn’t believe it could be that bad. On yet another level, they were showing the trailer for LOTR. I should have trusted my better judgement. (Okay, the LOTR trailer was worth it though:) )
I paid $12 (TWELVE DOLLARS) to see Loser last year. I thought, well, Jason Biggs was pretty funny in American Pie and Mena Suvari was pretty good in American Beauty - how bad could it be? Really bad. Really really bad. I don’t know, maybe you have to be a teenager to get it.
But the only movie I’ve ever paid money to see and then walked out of was Yentl. Jesus, what an awful movie.
So, are you saying that slaves really were these happy people who sang away as they toiled? Were they really happy to be slaves? That’s the way the movie portrayed them.
Apologizing for the thread drift, and returning you to the scheduled discussion.
Yeah, I kinda enjoyed it, which I was expecting. But I really can’t pretend that it had any actual quality.
Actually, I’ve paid to see way too many of the movies mentioned here. And kinda liked many of them. Robocop 2 and The Fifth Element are both on my short list of favorites, though I will admit that the former is deeply lacking in any sort of cinematic greatness, I just like watching it.