Christian Forums

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

What is the worst movie you've ever seen?

God&DogGirl

Member
Everyone has seen one. A movie so awful, so bad, so horrendous that if we could go back in time and BURN the script before it was made into the movie, we'd do it.

Now I am masochistic in that I love bad movies. They're fun to laugh at, to point out the plot holes, and to make fun of. Some bad movies are so bad they're good. I am speaking, of course, of Troll 2, Plan 9 From Outer Space, and even The Room.

Then there are the ones that are just BAD. That you cringe at when you see the cover at the video store. That you walked out of the theater before it ended. That you told all your friends to stay away from.

I don't know about you, but I really enjoy bashing bad movies. I don't know what it is but it's fun to me. Just don't directly insult real people because everyone deserves respect (have fun with the characters though).

I'd like to know what movie that is for you. And see if we have any in common.

Have fun!!
 
I like "so bad, they're good" movies...I have a real fondness for Ed Wood, William Castle (his "13 Ghosts" is still one of my all time favs) and just about anything with Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing or Vincent Price in them.

For a movie to be just plain bad...there needs to be some kind of expectation that it's going to be an "A" movie...but it plays worse than the worst of the "B"s.

For me, one of the worst was "Reign of Fire". It had Christian Bale and Michael McConaughey and even Gerard Butler in it...how good is that! The special effects were good. The plot was a post-apocalyptic, fight to survive plot, lots of action...

...and it was excruciatingly bad...bad..bad. The only reason why I wound up sitting through the whole thing was that my son was enjoying it.
 
Oh, and another one that just didn't make it...no one should have made it....

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Chrystal Skull.

Bad.

Bad, bad, bad.

Even Harrison Ford looked like he knew how bad it was.
 
I'm picky about my movies. I try to consider the genre before labeling it good or bad. So a comedy has a little more leeway then a drama. My rule of thumb when grading a movie is content of story, message and production value. I pretty much stick with that. Soooooo...the worst all time movie I have ever seen based on this is...... "The Thin Red Line"

I about walked out of the theater. However, if you look up this film you'll see that critics loved it, and if you pay off enough critics to love your film then others will say it's good as well I guess.

Gene Siskel described it as the "finest contemporary war film I've seen." Here is a little Wiki info pasted about it. Academy Awards for Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Film Editing, Best Original Score, Best Picture, Best Sound and Best Adapted Screenplay. It failed to win any of these awards.However, the film was awarded the Golden Bear for Best Film at the Berlin International Film Festival for 1999.The Thin Red Line was named Best Cinematography for 1998 by the National Society of Film Critics in 1998. Time magazine ranked Malick's film #6 on their Best of 1998 Cinema list. Jonathan Rosenbaum, a film critic for the Chicago Reader, ranked Malick's film as his second favorite film of 1999. Martin Scorsese ranked it as his second favorite film of the 1990s on Roger Ebert's television show

All this film had was an all star cased. Half of Hollywood's who's who a list was in it. This was supposed to be a story about Guadalcanal. A TRUE STORY about one of the most important battles of the Pacific.

However they turned it into a two hour feminine high-gene commercial. The story-plot was awful. All of the soldiers where angry cry-baby wimps who did not want to fight because war is wrong and bad. That brings us to the message....war is bad and sad...ALWAYS. The production value? Well they had a few ships and wooden guns a couple of explosions, but the best part was the uniforms.....pssssst when doing a historical movie it pays to be accurate. Guys in green paints and shirts with helmets from a toy store might save you money, but won't win you any points.

This was nothing but a Hollywood liberal film about war where no one says anything bad about it because it might hurt others feelings. Like when you kid brings home something from art class.
:popcorn
 
I enjoy terrible movies just as the OP posted in the same manner.

Kung-pow is the only movie I ever walked out on, in fact ive never even watched it other than the 10 or 15 mins i saw in theatres when it came out.

So that is my least favorite.
 
Oh, and another one that just didn't make it...no one should have made it....

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Chrystal Skull.

Bad.

Bad, bad, bad.

Even Harrison Ford looked like he knew how bad it was.
i wasnt all that impressed by that. it lacked the originality of the earlier indiana jones.
 
The Alien Factor, made in 1977, the same year as the original star wars movie. I even own a copy and can't bear to watch it all in one sitting.
 
Hands down, the trophy goes to, retire the category. Worst movie ever...EVER, is Actium Maximus: War of the Alien Dinosaurs.

To save time, I will cut and paste a review I posted on IMDB last month.

Let's talk about bad movies for a moment. A bad movie tends to fall in one of two categories. The first being that it has some redeeming quality. Maybe it's funny in spite of itself, maybe it becomes a guilty pleasure. The other category is one that is so abysmally bad that it can only be enjoyed with friends over beer and pizza, laughing and making MST3K-esque comments throughout the film. The later was our intention when deciding to watch Actium Maximus: War of the Alien Dinosaurs.

This movie was far beyond bad. It belongs in a category all by itself (and then that category needs to be shot into outer space). In fact, ten minutes into this film we could no longer make fun of it. It became physically painful to watch, and may have caused permanent psychological damage. I would not have been surprised, once the movie was over, if my phone would have rung and the voice on the other end informed me I would die in 7 days.

It is unclear what writer, director, composer and star Mark Hicks was shooting for, but what is clear is he was clearly not taking his medication. You would think a movie, containing both a narrator and subtitles would make the plot easier to understand. Not so. The narrator speaks as distinctly as the Daleks from Dr. Who. The subtitles, often paragraph long and displayed for only 3 seconds, was certainly in need of a spell checker.

I'm no expert, but if I was to venture a guess, Mark invested his life savings into this film, all $140.00, and $25 of that was spent on Chinese food while editing. There were very few humans in this film. Mark Hicks plays Jacinlun Axezun (say that fast 5 times), a character similar to Han Solo. That is if Han was an overweight, monotone, lifeless dullard with all the bravado and sex appeal of a substitute chemistry teacher on anti-depressants. The arch-villain of this film is Grand Automaton Polpox (sounds like a disease) wonderfully played by a box with a blue knob.

In order to divert the masses from his genocidal plans to exterminate the Rebel Laffrodites (I seriously am not making these names up)he holds these grand exhibitions pitting alien dinosaurs in mortal combat. Get ready, some serious blue-screen work here. I guess Phil Tippit was booked, because these dinosaurs were crafted from sock puppets, coated in play-doh, bacon and corn syrup.

Every good director knows to have an establishing shot, especially when moving from one location to another. Mark doesn't disappoint here, as he creates an establishing shot of the exterior of the city which was actually the surface of a water-less aquarium.

Sounds good so far right?

So while Mark and his crew (consisting of some woman who may or may not of had dialogue, as she apparently didn't have a microphone) Polpox's right hand man, played by a stalagmite, warns him of an assassination plot against him. The assassin, as it turns out, is a moth. Go figure.

The subtitle, "War of the Alien Dinosaurs" is also confusing. To be defined as "alien", it must come from an alien world. That's fine, as Polpox gathers dinosaurs from other planets. But dinosaurs? Unless he has a time machine, these beasts would just be indigenous animals. Or are the indigenous animals once prehistoric animals from the homeworld that somehow migrated across space. But, considering that these dinosaurs are made out of sock puppets, play-doh, bacon and corn syrup, I suppose it doesn't warrant much thought.

The one saving grace this film offers is intellectual higher ground. What that means is, if someone is engaged in a conversation and utters the phrase "(insert name here) is the worst movie ever", take comfort in knowing they're wrong.

As for me, if I was the sole survivor of a global holocaust, and this was the only DVD left on Earth, believe me when I say I would glee-fully coat my eyes with honey and face-plant into a pile of dirt covered in fire ants.
 
Tropic Thunder.

Me and my friends went to the movies for my 13th birthday. We kind of figured it was rated R for violence, and kind of conned my parents into letting us see it.
It. Was. Awful.
It was rated R for everything but violence and so vulgar I never want to think about it again.
And I was so embarrassed because my parents were watching it with us. :couch
 
I forget the name of it, but- Wait, I just remembered. It was called "Catalina Caper", and we were watching a Mystery Science Theater 3000(Spoof commentary that makes fun of the movie) version of it. It was still horrible, even with the normally funny MST3K added to it.
 
v for vendetta and its shameless leftist fundamentalism--so awful even the creator of the v for vendetta comic condemned it.
 
Practically every movie they've made past 1987 has been bad. I grew up at a time when, William Castle made his,"gimmick" movies. I went to see one called, "The House on Haunted Hill." They had a curtain at the front of the theater and unbeknownst to the audience, they had a luminous skeleton behind the curtain and at a particular scene in the film, the curtain opened and the Skeleton was drawn (with a wire) across the heads of the movie goers, giving an impression it was coming out of the screen during a certain scary part. Those were the days. (circa 1959)

The king of B movies, "Roger Corman" made a lot of motor cycle, horror, and other "campy" films during the 1950s and 60s. He usually used, Boris Karloff, Vincent Price, Peter Lorre in quite a few of these, but they were a lot of fun. I got to meet and talk with him about 5 years ago. It's king of cool to meet someone associated with 50s and 60s films that I seen over and over again during my childhood. Anyone remember, "Famous Monsters Magazine?"
 
When I first read in this thread I figured you meant poorly made, poor acting, poor edits etc. However, I do see other "bad" movies listed.

The worst movie I've ever Not seen is Talledega Nights. I try to read reviews and all that before paying for any movie... but all I went by on this was the trailers played before another movie.

This movie is so raunchy it's unpalatable! I walked out and had my movie refunded! Ugh! :eek2
 
Reptilian.
Exact quote: "This is sortin' to look like some-sort of prehistoric pettin' zoo."
Need I say more?:biglol

The Green Hornet
The first superhero movie where I wanted the main character to lose. I think the producers get a pleasure out of annoying the audience.:nono2

The 7 Adventures of Sinbad: the Persian Prince
Stopped at the prophecy. I like to make fun of movies as much as the next girl but I'm not this sadistic.:bigfrown

Check out Transmorphers, The Terminators, and anything else Asylum makes. You can not make a movie more awful than these guys. Seriously, they're professionals at being awful.
 
When I first read in this thread I figured you meant poorly made, poor acting, poor edits etc. However, I do see other "bad" movies listed.

The worst movie I've ever Not seen is Talledega Nights. I try to read reviews and all that before paying for any movie... but all I went by on this was the trailers played before another movie.

This movie is so raunchy it's unpalatable! I walked out and had my movie refunded! Ugh! :eek2


What?????

That movie is hilarious!!!!

I didn't think it was that great the first time, but after seeing a few times it got a lot better.
 
What?????

That movie is hilarious!!!!

I didn't think it was that great the first time, but after seeing a few times it got a lot better.

IDK but perhaps a review of why you need this type of experience in your Christian life is due?
[FONT=Palatino, Times New Roman, Georgia, Times, serif][FONT=Palatino, Times New Roman, Georgia, Times, serif]Wow! What a nasty little collection of abrasive snippets at everything wholesome and pure. Including God...... [/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Palatino, Times New Roman, Georgia, Times, serif][FONT=Palatino, Times New Roman, Georgia, Times, serif]I am not going to spend a lot of time on the story and plot because this film is saturated with assaults on morality and decency[/FONT][/FONT]
http://www.capalert.com/capreports/talladeganights.htm
 
"The End of Evangelion". Name a content problem, it has it. The English version has bad language including the f-word. There's sexual content and nudity. The violence is graphic and frequent. Worst of all, it's extremely offense to Christians and just plain blasphemous. Avoid at all costs.
 
Back
Top