I'm fairly sure "Tip Toes" belongs on this list somewhere, though.


Well, I’ve certainly heard of him.Altered States. It pisses me off because it has absolutely nothing to do with established facts about genetics, evolution, or plain reality. What really disappoints me is that it has William Hurt, one of the best actors that nobody's ever heard of.
Altered States is a designated stoner movie. It’s best appreciated while under the influence of certain controlled substances.There's an interesting anecdote about the Altered States script/movie. Chayefsky had an unprecedented clause in his contract requiring that the movie be shot exactly according to his script — scene-by-scene, line-by-line.
Ken Russell, the director, did just that. Still, Chayefsky demanded that his name be taken off the movie. The screenplay is instead credited to “Sidney Aaron.”
The reason? Chayefsky apparently wanted all the long speeches of the script to be spoken very deliberately by the actors, so the audience could mull them over. He hated the fact that Russell had the actors race through the dialog.
Dawn of the Dead. It must have had the worst, least-convincing acting of any movie I've ever seen. I read the little pamphlet inside the case before watching and I went in expecting an epic social commentary set against the backdrop of a zombie apocalypse. However, aside from a few racial slurs at the beginning of the movie, it has little relevance to anything that happens in the real world, just like the acting has nothing to do with the behavior of people in the real world.
actual viewing experience; it's the fact that many people think this crapfest set the bar for horror movies for decades to come.
THANK YOU. I've never understood why people make such a big deal about it either. I love that little satirical bit where the zombies are clawing at a shop window in the mall while commercials drone over the loud speaker, but most of the movie was dull and repetitive. I appreciated how crazy some the gore effects were, but the characters and story bored me.
I loved the original "Night of the Living Dead", though. It was a solid, straightforward horror flick with some interesting characters spending most of the movie in a single location that worked perfectly for creating an eerie and suspenseful tone/atmosphere. This is one of the cases where I thought the sequel equaled bigger and better (budget-wise), but also dumber, more meandering, and less focused.
^ How about John Carpenter's "first" film, made with Dan O'Bannon?
Of course I'm talking about Dark Star, which is also in my collection.
Escape from L.A. is fun, but if you compare it to New York, you'll hate it.
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension
Rachel Getting Married is the worst movie you've ever seen? Not even close in my book. If that's the worst you can do, I applaud your skill in selecting worthwhile movies to watch. I thought it was one of the best films of 2008--and so did many of the critics.
Now, The Room, there's something bad.
I say again, "Birdemic" is worse than The Room by orders of magnitude.
I liked the first "Universal Soldier" movie as a fun B-movie. It's silly and not a good movie from an objective standpoint, but I find it enjoyable in a campy way. Dolph Lundgren is hilarious as an over-the-top psychopath and Jean Claude Van Damme has some funny moments like doing the splits in his underwear in the middle of a fight.
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