Horrible fucking movies

syrupy

Authorized Buyer
Anything by Neil Breen. His latest, Fateful Findings, is on Amazon Prime now. I found his work through this Red Letter video on his first film Double Down:

Looks like Double Down is available streamed:
 
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ClearBlueLou

unbearably light in the being....
I have tried watching Adam Sandler's movies but hated them. I didn't like him on SLN either. When he came on I wanted to change the channel. I tried to give him a chance when he pursued movies but I just don't like him. I don't like Cameron Diaz either and I think she's homely.

There's certain actors that I just don't like.

Edit
I don't like Tom Cruise anymore personally so it's hard for me to separate the person from the character. Anybody involved in Scientology I can't take serious, it turns me off even an actor. Also John Travolta I can't watch his stuff anymore, I used to really like him.

After Tom Cruise jumped on Oprah's sofa on her TV program some years back I've labeled him a nut case. Then when I heard all the Scientology stuff, I won't be watching Mission Impossible, let's put it that way.
In fairness, Adam Sandler has only made ONE movie... he just makes it over and over and over.

Watch “The Wedding Singer”, and you’ve seen everything he has to offer


Anything by Tarantino...
I’m guessing QT is an acquired taste, and a lot of people never acquire it.

My first QT was Pulp Fiction, and it frankly took watching Kill Bill for me to really ‘get’ Pulp Fiction - who knows, I might not have caught on to Kill Bill had I seen *it* first....

At this point I think his biggest problem is that he OVERdoes everything - not necessarily a bad thing, but he seems to be intent on recapturing/recreating the experience of being swept up and carried along, and I think people forget the rollercoaster aspect, so his twists in plot and character are more jarring, his visuals more shocking...I frankly think some folks get hung up on one scene, one twist, one image - and find themselves pulled out of the movie.

For me, the key to watching him is his sense of humor arising out of the worst situations - if you don’t KNOW he’s going to do stuff like that, the impact gets magnified. A LOT.
 
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macbill

Oh No! Mr macbill!!
Staff member
It is funny how we react to actors. I hate Owen Wilson, who is probably a fine person to know and hang with. He seems to play the same role as the smarmy, "Eddy Haskel-like" character. For some reason, he gets on my nerves. Silly.
 

ClearBlueLou

unbearably light in the being....
Wilson has some o’ that in common with Matthew McConaughy, who was GREAT in True Detective, but not so much otherwise.... Wilson was terrific as Hans in Zoolander, a terrifically bad move (deliberately, hysterically so).
 

Baron23

Well-Known Member
I have only walked out on two movies in my life:

Barry Lyndon - Kubrek makes two kinds of movies, great and abysmal. This was abysmal AND it was three hours and 23 minutes of abysmal.

The remake of The Postman Always Rings Twice with Nicholson and Lange. Hard to miss with those two, but the director managed it, IMO.
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
Barry Lyndon - Kubrek makes two kinds of movies, great and abysmal. This was abysmal AND it was three hours and 23 minutes of abysmal.
It is a beautiful movie that could have two hours cut from it and it would STILL be too long. Beautiful in that every scene is Kubrik at his visual best. The movie looks great. But, the "plot" is like a complex road movie where each stop is irrelevant and you hope the powerful ending ties it all together.

It doesn't.

I felt much the same in Eyes Wide Shut. Pretty, but you kept waiting....and waiting...and waiting...

If you read the plot summaries of both after watching them, most would be astonished. First, that there was an underlying story at all and; second, that it was so detailed.

I love Kubrik's films in general. However, when he goes wrong, he goes wrong. (That being said, Rotten Tomatoes rates the movie very high. Critics 93% and audiences 92% "fresh". I wonder if they're reporting what they like or what they're supposed to like.)
 
Tranquility,

ClearBlueLou

unbearably light in the being....
The full extreme...I've only walked out on two movies, too: Armageddon and Flesh for Frankenstein

Both very limited offerings: noise and space rock, vs nudity and intestines in 3-D - but hard to say which was more stupid, more offensive, more boring....

OTOH I loved the Jackson Hobbit films for all their flaws (still needs tighter editing, damn it), whereas I was bored spineless by the book...then again, i was 15, I’d already read LoTR and loved IT...and it is what it is: the Hobbit has nothing for me.

I only became interested again after years of wandering through the Middle-Earth related stuff, learning about *what else* was going on around the fringes of ‘The Hobbit’. Jackson’s vision of the story matches mine, at least in size and scope. I still love the whole thing
 
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TheThriftDrifter

Land of the long vapor cloud
Yer, I read the Hobbit/Lord of the Rings as a kid, no doubt the movies are well made and in many ways amazing, just didn't align with the vision in my imagination.

I have such vivid, cool, deeply loved memories of books I read in childhood, that no movie based on one of them really stands a chance.

In general, i do like books that I have read as an adult, that are made into movies.
The Harry Potter and Hunger Games series springs to mind.
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
Yer, I read the Hobbit/Lord of the Rings as a kid, no doubt the movies are well made and in many ways amazing, just didn't align with the vision in my imagination.

I have such vivid, cool, deeply loved memories of books I read in childhood, that no movie based on one of them really stands a chance.

In general, i do like books that I have read as an adult, that are made into movies.
The Harry Potter and Hunger Games series springs to mind.

Maybe we should start a thread for most disappointing movie. For a number of reasons, I read "Ender's Game" most years around my birthday. Do you think I liked the movie? It was not my vision. Many who saw it liked it (A little. It was not a masterpiece even if you were not comparing it to the book.), but for me it was very disappointing. I knew it was going to be, so it might have been a self-fulfilling prophesy.

I think The Hobbit is like that too. When young, I found the book near impossible to put down where, with the LOTR, I had to struggle to get through it. The Hobbit movie was no match and my disappointment made me like the movie less where as with LOTR, the movies were fine. Long and needed to get rid of tons of boring battle footage, but fine.
 

Deleted Member 1643

Well-Known Member
And Adrian Brody as, a tough guy..:rolleyes:

How about Adrian Brody statutorily raping his mutant step-daughter in Splice?

ISLoflMR.png


A better man, for sure. And a movie so bad you'll stay just to watch the train wreck.

Funny, someone mentioned Idiocracy as a "bad" movie in 2015 - just before it came true!
 
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GetLeft

Well-Known Member
Well, I'd add The Spy Who Dumped Me to the list which I broke down and watched last night. But it couldn't have been that bad if it has Kate Mckinnon and Mila Kunis in it. Could it? I'm off to watch another likely stinker: The Hustle.
 
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basement farmer

My face is melting...
The Lobster

Because it had so many rave reviews and great actors, my girl and I sat through it's entirety patiently waiting for something to happen that would convince us that we were intellectually clever enough to appreciate the movie.

I normally really like offbeat and even 'weird' humor oriented entertainment. Sorry if I offend anyone but The Lobster came across as pretentious and not at all funny or clever. It just rambled on pointlessly for two hours and left us wondering WTF?
 

Tranquility

Well-Known Member
Well - that's because you're clearly partnered. To someone who has lived life mainly alone and been made to feel suspicious for it, The Lobster had considerable relevance. One of those movies that comes to mind again and again.
That is a very good point. Even though we're all different and prefer different things, even if we liked the same things in general does not mean we would like the same things when looked through the lens of current experience.
 

Ramahs

Fucking Combustion (mostly) Since February 2017
The Lobster

Because it had so many rave reviews and great actors, my girl and I sat through it's entirety patiently waiting for something to happen that would convince us that we were intellectually clever enough to appreciate the movie.

I normally really like offbeat and even 'weird' humor oriented entertainment. Sorry if I offend anyone but The Lobster came across as pretentious and not at all funny or clever. It just rambled on pointlessly for two hours and left us wondering WTF?

Hmmm. I liked it. I found it mildly/darkly funny at surface, and touching on depression/loneliness and the interconnectedness that all has in association with cultural/societal/social expectations to be largely on-point.

I found it amusing
 
Ramahs,
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