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SNAKES ON A PLANE
is that bad enough? :))
Final Analysis, Bad Boys, Under Siege 2, Sphinx, Money Talks, Most Wanted, Passenger 57
I know there's more. Just have to think it through.
Oh and I have not seen it since I was a child, but when I was a child, I thought King Kong Lives was a great sequel to a great movie. I might still have a soft spot for it, who knows.
Die Hard 2
Machete
Machete Kills
Bloodsport
Rambo 3
You did not just bring Vincent Price into this thread (no matter for what film). Just for that, I am going to banish you to some lonely far off place...
;)
The fearless vampire killers is not a bad movie.
Yes but I love it too.
You can throw Indy 4 into the ring for me as well
I would not call From Dusk till Dawn bad, although it is very uneven.
Yes. It could have been better.
Another film that does this is Something Wild, which starts as a comedy and turns into a thriller.
I never read the GH comics, so that could be the reason. Waltz is a hoot in it.
Death Race (never saw the original DR 2000) is not too different from Mad Max.
GH (the movie) has nothing to do with the real Green Hornet (who didn't start in the comics, anyway). The only good thing in it was Jay Chou, the best Kato since Bruce Lee. And you should really see the original Death Race. I loved it.
My pick : the Police Academy movies, if only for Michael Winslow.
Street Fighter
Barb Wire
Jonah Hex
Alone In The Dark
Batman & Robin
I think so too, but isn't it considered to be "bad"?
Here is a clip from the movie, starring the aforementioned Tommy, along with Mark (played by Greg Sestero, who ended up writing that making of book I mentioned: 'The Disaster Artist).
In the scene Tommy's fiancée Lisa has been telling people that Tommy's been hitting her but Tommy doesn't know that Mark is sleeping with Lisa behind his back!
The entire film's like this. Plot threads and major characters appear only to disappear a few scenes later and never get mentioned again. (This happens well into the final act of the film, too).
The best scene, almost poetic in its nonsense, is when Tommy buys some flowers for his beloved. It's like the writer/director has never seen people speak to each other in real life:
I have been to see it on the big screen multiple times, including one time with a Q+A with Tommy, who signed my DVD copy. I implore you to see the movie if you haven't already. It's bonkers!
:P