The bad movies you love

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  • goldenswissroyalegoldenswissroyale Switzerland
    Posts: 4,490
    I was a teenager when Pearl Harbor was released. I liked it a lot and bought it on VHS.
    I loved all the “old“ Michael Bay movies (before Transformers): fantastic explosions, great look, often great soundtrack. I'm a huge fan of The Rock. This was my most watched movie as a teenager and was so proud when I finally got the uncensored DVD.
  • JamesCraigJamesCraig Ancient Rome
    edited July 2019 Posts: 3,497
    Batman Forever. The Expendables. The Expendables II.

  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,999
    I don't care for John Wayne, it's nothing to do with him as a person, but i'm not a western fan, which is the genre we worked mostly in. On top of that, he was too old for this film. And lastly, it's clearly a cash-in on Dirty Harry. But I really like like McQ, in spite of those points. There's a pretty decent car chase, and a cracking Elmer Bernstein score. Get a ear full of this track that played during the chase...



    Talking of the chase, he drives a gorgeous Trans-Am. :(
  • Posts: 17,819
    I don't think McQ is a bad movie at all, @MajorDSmythe; it's a nice 70's thriller, despite being a Dirty Harry cash-in.
  • Posts: 16,222
    I don't care for John Wayne, it's nothing to do with him as a person, but i'm not a western fan, which is the genre we worked mostly in. On top of that, he was too old for this film. And lastly, it's clearly a cash-in on Dirty Harry. But I really like like McQ, in spite of those points. There's a pretty decent car chase, and a cracking Elmer Bernstein score. Get a ear full of this track that played during the chase...



    Talking of the chase, he drives a gorgeous Trans-Am. :(

    I love McQ. Seattle in 1974 looks nothing like today. However, there are a few locations from that film that remain.
  • Posts: 17,819
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I don't care for John Wayne, it's nothing to do with him as a person, but i'm not a western fan, which is the genre we worked mostly in. On top of that, he was too old for this film. And lastly, it's clearly a cash-in on Dirty Harry. But I really like like McQ, in spite of those points. There's a pretty decent car chase, and a cracking Elmer Bernstein score. Get a ear full of this track that played during the chase...



    Talking of the chase, he drives a gorgeous Trans-Am. :(

    I love McQ. Seattle in 1974 looks nothing like today. However, there are a few locations from that film that remain.

    Going off topic here, but how much has it changed? I'm afraid McQ is one of very few films I've seen that takes place in Seattle.
  • Posts: 7,537
    I don't care for John Wayne, it's nothing to do with him as a person, but i'm not a western fan, which is the genre we worked mostly in. On top of that, he was too old for this film. And lastly, it's clearly a cash-in on Dirty Harry. But I really like like McQ, in spite of those points. There's a pretty decent car chase, and a cracking Elmer Bernstein score. Get a ear full of this track that played during the chase...



    Talking of the chase, he drives a gorgeous Trans-Am. :(

    Really like McQ, only recently purchased it. It's better than his other cop movie, Brannigan. And that car chase at the finale is really well staged by veteran Director John Sturges.
  • LeonardPineLeonardPine The Bar on the Beach
    Posts: 4,078
    Doomsday (2008)

    This half arsed mish mash of Escape From New York and Mad Max 2 is pretty bloody awful but i do have fun with it. I usually cut to the scenes where 'Eden Sinclair' (a female Snake Plissken if you will played by the sexy Rhona Mitra) and her team infiltrate what was once Scotland, now closed off to the rest of the world to find a cure or something for an outbreak in England.

    Some great and very violent action in this, as Mitra proves herself a capable action actress as things go from bad to worse with her team decimated and the remainder being hunted by rejects from Mad Max 2.

    After his two excellent horror films Dog Soldiers and The Descent i expected much more from Neil Marshall than this unoriginal dreck.

    I do enjoy it's awfulness though!
  • Posts: 631
    After his two excellent horror films Dog Soldiers and The Descent i expected much more from Neil Marshall than this unoriginal dreck.

    Dog Soldiers was great and The Descent is one of my favourite movies ever. In my personal top ten. But Doomsday sucked bad.

    Bad movies I love: Deep Blue Sea and Showgirls.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,254
    Doomsday (2008)

    This half arsed mish mash of Escape From New York and Mad Max 2 is pretty bloody awful but i do have fun with it. I usually cut to the scenes where 'Eden Sinclair' (a female Snake Plissken if you will played by the sexy Rhona Mitra) and her team infiltrate what was once Scotland, now closed off to the rest of the world to find a cure or something for an outbreak in England.

    Some great and very violent action in this, as Mitra proves herself a capable action actress as things go from bad to worse with her team decimated and the remainder being hunted by rejects from Mad Max 2.

    After his two excellent horror films Dog Soldiers and The Descent i expected much more from Neil Marshall than this unoriginal dreck.

    I do enjoy it's awfulness though!

    Besides DS and TD, Marshall hasn't really made a lot of good movies at all. The recent Hellboy left me quite displeased as well. I've lost all interest in the man's work, and that comes from someone who also treats TD as one of his favourite horror films ever.
  • LeonardPineLeonardPine The Bar on the Beach
    Posts: 4,078
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Doomsday (2008)

    This half arsed mish mash of Escape From New York and Mad Max 2 is pretty bloody awful but i do have fun with it. I usually cut to the scenes where 'Eden Sinclair' (a female Snake Plissken if you will played by the sexy Rhona Mitra) and her team infiltrate what was once Scotland, now closed off to the rest of the world to find a cure or something for an outbreak in England.

    Some great and very violent action in this, as Mitra proves herself a capable action actress as things go from bad to worse with her team decimated and the remainder being hunted by rejects from Mad Max 2.

    After his two excellent horror films Dog Soldiers and The Descent i expected much more from Neil Marshall than this unoriginal dreck.

    I do enjoy it's awfulness though!

    Besides DS and TD, Marshall hasn't really made a lot of good movies at all. The recent Hellboy left me quite displeased as well. I've lost all interest in the man's work, and that comes from someone who also treats TD as one of his favourite horror films ever.

    Couldn't even be bothered with the new Hellboy. What a waste of time and money.

    The Descent was one of the best horror films in years. Especially with the proper ending.
  • Posts: 16,222
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I don't care for John Wayne, it's nothing to do with him as a person, but i'm not a western fan, which is the genre we worked mostly in. On top of that, he was too old for this film. And lastly, it's clearly a cash-in on Dirty Harry. But I really like like McQ, in spite of those points. There's a pretty decent car chase, and a cracking Elmer Bernstein score. Get a ear full of this track that played during the chase...



    Talking of the chase, he drives a gorgeous Trans-Am. :(

    I love McQ. Seattle in 1974 looks nothing like today. However, there are a few locations from that film that remain.

    Going off topic here, but how much has it changed? I'm afraid McQ is one of very few films I've seen that takes place in Seattle.

    Amazon bought out several neighborhoods and blocks and redeveloped. So many of the privately owned businesses are gone to make way for more Amazon buildings and so forth. Countless high rises constantly under construction.
  • SeanCraigSeanCraig Germany
    Posts: 732
    „Help!“ starring The Beatles
    That movie is really nothing but insane - but I still can‘t stop laughing about it. It‘s sooo funny - and the music is timeless and great (still one of my favourite Beatles albums, anyway).
  • BondStuBondStu Moonraker 6
    Posts: 373
    Biggles
  • Posts: 15,229
    Been rewatching Detonator/Death Train. Far from good, but boy did the casting director do his job right!
  • Posts: 15,229
    Rewatching Detonator 2: Night Watch and boy even for made for TV B movies, you can go down in a sequel. Casting is far worse than the first and do far the plot much weaker. And generally Iove crime thrillers with an art element in it.
  • Posts: 15,229
    It's St George's Day so I'm rewatching The Magic Sword. The first time since my childhood. It's a cheap medieval fantasy movie, much stupider than I remembered, but I'm having a ball. For all its flaws and goofiness it has plenty of naive charm. And you can't go wrong with casting Basil Rathbone as your villain.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,254
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    Doomsday (2008)

    This half arsed mish mash of Escape From New York and Mad Max 2 is pretty bloody awful but i do have fun with it. I usually cut to the scenes where 'Eden Sinclair' (a female Snake Plissken if you will played by the sexy Rhona Mitra) and her team infiltrate what was once Scotland, now closed off to the rest of the world to find a cure or something for an outbreak in England.

    Some great and very violent action in this, as Mitra proves herself a capable action actress as things go from bad to worse with her team decimated and the remainder being hunted by rejects from Mad Max 2.

    After his two excellent horror films Dog Soldiers and The Descent i expected much more from Neil Marshall than this unoriginal dreck.

    I do enjoy it's awfulness though!

    Besides DS and TD, Marshall hasn't really made a lot of good movies at all. The recent Hellboy left me quite displeased as well. I've lost all interest in the man's work, and that comes from someone who also treats TD as one of his favourite horror films ever.

    Couldn't even be bothered with the new Hellboy. What a waste of time and money.

    The Descent was one of the best horror films in years. Especially with the proper ending.

    @LeonardPine
    I showed The Descent in my horror class recently. None of my students knew the film. They are all fans now. 😉
  • goldenswissroyalegoldenswissroyale Switzerland
    edited April 2021 Posts: 4,490
    Wait @DarthDimi. What's a horror class? Students coming in your class and you talk about horror in literature and watch great horror flicks regularly? Sounds like a dream job :D
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    edited April 2021 Posts: 24,254
    Wait @DarthDimi. What's a horror class? Students coming in your class and you talk about horror in literature and watch great horror flicks regularly? Sounds like a dream job :D

    Well, it's an extracurricular semestrial activity, organized to integrate content--any content--and practical skills. In my class, the content is the horror genre in its cultural, technical, psychological, ... aspects. The practical skills involve writing, speaking, reading, ... in English (my students are Flemish). Colleagues of mine have similar classes, ranging from architecture over medical science to philosophy. Students are free to choose. The average number of students per class is 12. My class is the most popular one with 22 students. ;-)

    Today, my students and I watched The Descent together (Covid-proof, of course). We'll be analyzing the film during our next session.
  • goldenswissroyalegoldenswissroyale Switzerland
    Posts: 4,490
    @DarthDimi : How awesome is that. I would have loved such a class when I was in school. How old are these students?

    My last horror movie was Hereditary. What do you think about it?
    I realize that I should visit the horror thread more.
  • DarthDimiDarthDimi Behind you!Moderator
    Posts: 24,254
    @goldenswissroyale
    My students are 17, 18 years old. It may surprise you to learn that most of them are girls. 😉

    I quite like Hereditary, though I prefer Aster's follow-up film Midsommar. Tony Colette is great in Hereditary. I also love the slow pace of the film; Aster allows his film to breathe. At the same time, I feel choked to death by the family's descent into utter dysfunctionality. I mean that in a good way: I love horror flicks that elicit a visceral response. The climax, which some critics seem to think is "too much", is actually a really tense twist-ending that I particularly enjoy.

    What did you think of the film?
  • MaxCasinoMaxCasino United States
    edited April 2021 Posts: 4,693
    Ludovico wrote: »
    BAIN123 wrote: »
    He could have been a great Two-Face but he played it as a cartoony over-the-top villain.

    I remember him once saying he met Bob Kane. Does anyone know what Kane thought of this film?

    I know Batman and Robin was the last Batman film he saw before he died. Poor poor man.

    It might have killed him.

    It kind of served Bob Kane right, as he never really shared credit with anyone, as historians have shown. If you hear about his original ideas on his own, he would have been nothing. Bill Finger is the real creator of Batman that we know. Bob Kane’s Batman, more like Dorkman.

    As for my picks for this list:
    The Fox and the Hound
    Atlantis The Lost Empire
    Batman Forever
    Billy Madison
    Superman 4
    Anger Management
    Men in Black 2
    Aladdin and the King of Thieves
  • Posts: 16,222
    I love the extremely cheesy 1987 romantic comedy TV film

    THE LAST FLING

    starring John Ritter and Connie Sellecca.
    Directed by Corey Allen -Buzz in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE.

    MV5BNWZhODU4OWMtOTg0Yy00ZmQ1LWEwMTMtNGYzNjczYmMyNTFlXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTk5MjAyMjM@._V1_.jpg
  • Posts: 15,229
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    Ludovico wrote: »
    BAIN123 wrote: »
    He could have been a great Two-Face but he played it as a cartoony over-the-top villain.

    I remember him once saying he met Bob Kane. Does anyone know what Kane thought of this film?

    I know Batman and Robin was the last Batman film he saw before he died. Poor poor man.

    It might have killed him.

    It kind of served Bob Kane right, as he never really shared credit with anyone, as historians have shown. If you hear about his original ideas on his own, he would have been nothing. Bill Finger is the real creator of Batman that we know. Bob Kane’s Batman, more like Dorkman.

    As for my picks for this list:
    The Fox and the Hound
    Atlantis The Lost Empire
    Batman Forever
    Billy Madison
    Superman 4
    Anger Management
    Men in Black 2
    Aladdin and the King of Thieves

    Yes I know how Bob Kane kind of vampirised other people's work and was not the true creative force behind Batman.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I love the extremely cheesy 1987 romantic comedy TV film

    THE LAST FLING

    starring John Ritter and Connie Sellecca.
    Directed by Corey Allen -Buzz in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE.

    MV5BNWZhODU4OWMtOTg0Yy00ZmQ1LWEwMTMtNGYzNjczYmMyNTFlXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTk5MjAyMjM@._V1_.jpg

    Ouch that looks terrible. I really want to see it now.
  • TripAcesTripAces Universal Exports
    Posts: 4,589
    An early Downey film in which he seemed to be playing himself at the time. Not sure why I have always loved this film, partially the look, partially the soundtrack (one of Thomas Newman's first very best scores, coupled with an array of rock and rap staples).



  • goldenswissroyalegoldenswissroyale Switzerland
    edited April 2021 Posts: 4,490
    DarthDimi wrote: »
    @goldenswissroyale
    My students are 17, 18 years old. It may surprise you to learn that most of them are girls. 😉

    I quite like Hereditary, though I prefer Aster's follow-up film Midsommar. Tony Colette is great in Hereditary. I also love the slow pace of the film; Aster allows his film to breathe. At the same time, I feel choked to death by the family's descent into utter dysfunctionality. I mean that in a good way: I love horror flicks that elicit a visceral response. The climax, which some critics seem to think is "too much", is actually a really tense twist-ending that I particularly enjoy.

    What did you think of the film?

    I'm also a teacher and I had already incorporated scenes from movies I love into my class (i.e. a scene from The Rock (topic: effect of nerve gases) or YOLT (electromagnet) but what you describe sounds much much cooler.

    I definitely liked Hereditary. If “liking“ can be the right word for such an intense and dramatic family story. Colette's performance is amazing in an increasing creepy way and the slow camera movements made me almost crazy (in a good way). The car accident (we have a link to The Descent here!) and the minutes afterwords are sad, shocking and VERY uncomfortable. Tge slow pace wasn't a bad thing at all.
    The end was a bit strange but alright. Very dark and defintely better than the sometimes stupid happy ends in other horror films.
    And my heart strangely jumped the most during Colettes's car scene when we heard the noise her daughter made earlier.
    I should obviously watch Midsommar one day.
  • Posts: 16,222
    Ludovico wrote: »
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    Ludovico wrote: »
    BAIN123 wrote: »
    He could have been a great Two-Face but he played it as a cartoony over-the-top villain.

    I remember him once saying he met Bob Kane. Does anyone know what Kane thought of this film?

    I know Batman and Robin was the last Batman film he saw before he died. Poor poor man.

    It might have killed him.

    It kind of served Bob Kane right, as he never really shared credit with anyone, as historians have shown. If you hear about his original ideas on his own, he would have been nothing. Bill Finger is the real creator of Batman that we know. Bob Kane’s Batman, more like Dorkman.

    As for my picks for this list:
    The Fox and the Hound
    Atlantis The Lost Empire
    Batman Forever
    Billy Madison
    Superman 4
    Anger Management
    Men in Black 2
    Aladdin and the King of Thieves

    Yes I know how Bob Kane kind of vampirised other people's work and was not the true creative force behind Batman.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I love the extremely cheesy 1987 romantic comedy TV film

    THE LAST FLING

    starring John Ritter and Connie Sellecca.
    Directed by Corey Allen -Buzz in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE.

    MV5BNWZhODU4OWMtOTg0Yy00ZmQ1LWEwMTMtNGYzNjczYmMyNTFlXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTk5MjAyMjM@._V1_.jpg

    Ouch that looks terrible. I really want to see it now.

    It's pretty bad, actually but funny.
  • Posts: 15,229
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    Ludovico wrote: »
    MaxCasino wrote: »
    Ludovico wrote: »
    BAIN123 wrote: »
    He could have been a great Two-Face but he played it as a cartoony over-the-top villain.

    I remember him once saying he met Bob Kane. Does anyone know what Kane thought of this film?

    I know Batman and Robin was the last Batman film he saw before he died. Poor poor man.

    It might have killed him.

    It kind of served Bob Kane right, as he never really shared credit with anyone, as historians have shown. If you hear about his original ideas on his own, he would have been nothing. Bill Finger is the real creator of Batman that we know. Bob Kane’s Batman, more like Dorkman.

    As for my picks for this list:
    The Fox and the Hound
    Atlantis The Lost Empire
    Batman Forever
    Billy Madison
    Superman 4
    Anger Management
    Men in Black 2
    Aladdin and the King of Thieves

    Yes I know how Bob Kane kind of vampirised other people's work and was not the true creative force behind Batman.
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    I love the extremely cheesy 1987 romantic comedy TV film

    THE LAST FLING

    starring John Ritter and Connie Sellecca.
    Directed by Corey Allen -Buzz in REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE.

    MV5BNWZhODU4OWMtOTg0Yy00ZmQ1LWEwMTMtNGYzNjczYmMyNTFlXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTk5MjAyMjM@._V1_.jpg

    Ouch that looks terrible. I really want to see it now.

    It's pretty bad, actually but funny.

    The female lead looks nice if extremely 80s.
  • mattjoesmattjoes Pay more attention to your chef
    Posts: 7,057
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    MV5BNWZhODU4OWMtOTg0Yy00ZmQ1LWEwMTMtNGYzNjczYmMyNTFlXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTk5MjAyMjM@._V1_.jpg
    Must be really uncomfortable sitting on that L.
    Leaning on the T looks okay, but not for too long.

    I watched the trailer. Loved the stunt where Ritter (?) gets thrown out of a house. And his Spanish is terrible, though maybe that was the point. "El auto es flambe"? I think they were going for "inflamable", meaning flammable.
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