We have here some movies from not so far past and some movies from 90's and we do little jump and find out
some the worst movies from middle of 20th century.Some of titles we never heard in whole life or
see somewhere but on other hand some title are we known and for some people good movies.In this
research we find out that some famous actors were in the worst movies ever .
Anus Magillicutty (2003): the anti-movie that anti-matters
he film focuses on the character Anus, who is obsessed with alcohol and sex. The story involves Anus'
efforts to hide a dead body. Eventually, however, Anus also has a run-in with Satan. As Anus explains to
his brother, "Remember that contract we had with Satan? To make us beautiful? ...I think he's come to
collect."
In late 2005 and early 2006, it ranked number 1 on the Internet Movie Database bottom 100 list, meaning
that it received the lowest scores among people evaluating films in the site's extensive database. A
critic from the State Press Magazine considers this to be the worst film ever,[1] although the film was
actually marketed that way, with the State Press quote appearing on the poster. Anus Magillicutty was
directed by Morey Fineburgh, and although written by Abraham Fineburgh, there was allegedly no real
screenplay.
Gigli (2003): The end of Bennyfer
Originally a very dark comedy with no romantic subplot, the producers demanded script rewrites throughout
filming. Some reviewers dubbed the film "The ultimate turkey of all time", referring to Lopez's
character's sex talk to Affleck's character inviting him to commit an act of oral sex: "It's
turkey time." "What?" "Gobble, gobble."
The Times newspaper gave the movie the rating below their lowest possible score of 0 stars, the
only movie to recieve this score. This film is also said to have been a factor in the break-up of the
engagement between its two stars. Winner of 7 Razzies (including 2005's Worst "Comedy" of Our First 25
Years). In addition Ben Affleck mocked the film on Saturday Night Live and The Tonight Show.
From Justin to Kelly (2003): From Theater To Video
The movie features Kelly Clarkson and Justin Guarini, the winner and runner-up of the first series of
American Idol, respectively. Texan singing waitress Kelly Taylor (played by Clarkson) meets Pennsylvania
college student Justin Bell (played by Guarini), they fall for each other, and then spend the rest of the
movie trying to get together.
The critics began mercilessly deriding the movie upon news of its making, and the movie was the box office
bomb they predicted despite its association with the popular television show. In an interesting twist,
theater chains threatened not to show it at all when distributor 20th Century Fox—anticipating a
theatrical flop. On the Internet Movie Database website the film is currently the worst movie ever made.
Other listing systems also rate it among the worst movies ever made. Craig Kilborn gave it a short and
devastating review one day after its release, with the words: "Here's the movie: From Justin To Kelly.
Here's my review: From Theater To Video". The film's choreography was considered so bad that a special
Golden Raspberry "Governor's Award" was created just so From Justin to Kelly could win it ...
Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever (2002): even the game was better
Starring Lucy Liu and Antonio Banderas, the film was universally panned by critics and is believed to
have no redeeming features (not even the comedy value normally associated with bad films). It is often
listed among the worst movies ever made. Financially, the film was a box office failure, grossing just
over $14 million compared to its $70 million budget. Liu and Banderas play opposing secret agents who
are supposedly enemies, but rather than fighting each other they end up teaming up to take down the
megalomaniacal director of the NSA.
A Game Boy Advance first-person shooter, Ecks vs. Sever, was based on a very old version of the movie's
script and, storywise, is almost nothing like the film. It was released before the movie. A version
after the movie's release, considered a sequel to the game but which followed the movie, was considered
an impressive technological feat on the GBA and was much better accepted than the movie itself.
Moulin Rouge ! (2001) : starring by Nicole Kidman
A musical…about a love-struck poet…in France? Save us a seat! Only drugged-out hairdressers and pompous
critics could endure this two-hour torture session. Not even Nicole Kidman on a giant swing could disguise
the fact that this pretentious pabulum was merely a hyperactive fashion show pretending to be a movie.
Little Nicky (2000)
Adam, Adam, why hast thou forsaken us? Just when we’d learned to appreciate The Waterboy and Happy Gilmore as unpolished comic gems, you went all high-concept, playing a mush-mouthed spawn of Satan. Too bad that between all the special effects and cameos you forgot to stick in a single funny gag.
Battlefield Earth (2000)
We’re not alleging Scientology brainwashes its flaky flock, but that’d explain John Travolta’s fervor to turn L. Ron Hubbard’s book into this megabomb. The humans-enslaved-by-aliens plot is lame, and Travolta’s manic performance as a nine-foot cosmic overlord makes Ricardo Montalban’s Khan look positively nuanced.
Erin Brockovich (2000) : starring by Julia Roberts
At last! Julia Roberts totally naked! She plays a secretary who uses her jahoobies to beat the bad guys.
Ha, ha, fooled ya! This bait ’n’ switch chick flick is actually about an overbearing, Wonderbra’d
rabble-rouser who yaps at an octave level somewhere between fingernails on a chalkboard and a dog
whistle. Who’s she hollering at? Who else—male corporate wags who dumped a little poison here and there.
Blues Brothers 2000 (1998)
The use of unnecessary violence toward the makers of this sequel…has been approved. Not only did this sorely misguided sequel fail to elicit one measly chuckle, but it dared to try replacing John Belushi with a bloated John Goodman and a pink-cheeked harmonica-honking brat. Prepare to burn in hell, Dan Aykroyd.
Godzilla (1998)
Can you imagine how many toy makers wanted Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich’s heads on a platter after this colossal load was pinched out on the moviegoing public? When a movie is so bad that little kids aren’t interested in plastic lizards that breathe fire, you know you’re in trouble. But how could this have flopped? It starred Matthew Broderick!
The Thin Red Line (1998)
“Oh, my soul, let me be in you now…” Whoops, we bought a ticket to a WWII action flick but wandered into
a candy-ass poetry reading. Supposedly about a battle for Guadalcanal, Line had plenty of existential
windblown grass and precious little combat, leaving Nick Nolte and Sean Penn holding their dicks instead
of their rifles.
The Postman (1997)
Having given up on art films like Tin Cup and The Bodyguard, Kevin Costner directed, starred, and
danced with letters in this tale of postapocalyptic mail service. There’s an underdog, world-saving
superhero, some bad guys who smoke, and a troubled, imperfect love interest. Sound familiar? It’s
Waterworld on land, with everything that implies.
Double Team (1997)
Chest-shaving Belgian midget Jean-Claude Van Damme is a counter-terrorist—whatever that is—hunting
has-been Mickey Rourke. Rourke, in turn, is gunning for Van Damme’s preggo wife. This film also stars
Dennis Rodman, prompting the Anti-Rodman-in-Movies legislation currently before Congress.
Spice World (1997)
We’ll tell you what we want, what we really, really want. We want 92 minutes of our lives back and a
five-way lesbian porn video to make up for this affront to A Hard Day’s Night—not to mention civilization
as we know it. Apparently, Girl Power means farting around miserable London, acting stupid, and dressing
like a street ho.
Batman & Robin (1997) : or how Batman became gay
The fourth installment of the Warner Bros. franchise that began with 1989's Batman and the lowest-grossing
of the film series. This film is often billed as the worst superhero movie of all time, even to the point
that star George Clooney said he would refund people's money if they stopped him on the street and said
they had paid to see it.
In an interview with Barbara Walters, Clooney claims he played Batman gay. The director Joel Schumacher
also reputedly admits to not being proud of this film (to the point where he flat-out apologizes for the
film, according to his commentary on the 2005 Special Edition DVD set), despite earlier statements to
the contrary.
Batman & Robin earned the nickname "Batman on Ice" for a scene in which the titular heroes both
inexplicably have retractable skate blades hidden inside their boots. The film was mocked for the poor
script, over-extending the campy attitude of the previous installment Batman Forever, the poor casting
of other "big-name" stars Uma Thurman and Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the addition of a poorly portrayed
Batgirl, played by Alicia Silverstone. Likely due to the film's poor reception, no more Batman movies
were made for nearly eight years.
An Alan Smithee Film : Burn Hollywood Burn (1997) : directed by Alan Smithee
In the film, an editor by the name of Alan Smithee (played by Eric Idle) has been allowed to direct Trio,
a big-budget action film starring Sylvester Stallone, Whoopi Goldberg, and Jackie Chan. However, the
studio recuts the film, and when Smithee sees the results (which he describes as being "worse than
Showgirls") and realises that he cannot use a pseudonym (because the only one allowed is "Alan Smithee")
he steals the film and goes on the run, threatening to burn it.
The film was written (and produced, though he wasn't credited for it) by Joe Eszterhas, and directed by
Arthur Hiller. However, Hiller objected to the way Eszterhas recut the film. So, as a result, in one of
Hollywood's greatest ironies, An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn is officially directed by Alan
Smithee. The movie was regarded as one of the worst films of all time, and managed to win five awards
(including Worst Picture) at the 1998 Golden Raspberry Awards. The film grossed $45,000, which, accounting
for inflation, is less than Plan 9 from Outer Space made during its release.
Manos: The Hands of Fate (1966) : where are the credits?!
This is a no-budget horror film made by an El Paso, Texas fertilizer salesman. It is famous for having an
opening nine-minute sequence in which nothing happens but endless driving through the countryside, due
to someone forgetting to add in the credits!.
The film gained cult popularity by being featured on the Mystery Science Theater 3000 television show.
It was the #1 movie on the IMDb Bottom 100 for a long time since the list was first created. Filmmaker
Quentin Tarantino owns a rare 35 mm copy of the film, and has stated that it is his favorite "comedy."
Monster A Go Go (1965) : No continuity, incomprehensible non-ending
The plot concerns an American astronaut who mysteriously disappears from his spacecraft as it parachutes
to Earth. The vanished astronaut is apparently replaced by and/or turned into a large, radioactive,
humanoid monster. A team of scientists and military men attempt to capture the monster--and at one point
succeed, only to have him escape again (however, both the capture and the escape are never shown, with
only the narrator revealing this to us).
Monster A Go-Go has an unusual, perhaps even unique, production history. Director Bill Rebane ran out
of money while making the film. Lewis, who needed a second film to show with his own feature, Moonshine
Mountain, bought the film, added a few extra scenes and some dialogue, and then released it, creating an
odd, disjointed film with little continuity. The film is infamous among those who have seen it for its
incomprehensible "non-ending."
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1956) : almost starring Bela Lugosi
The film is introduced and narrated by television psychic The Amazing Criswell, and involves aliens who
attempt to conquer the Earth by resurrecting corpses from a cemetery. The aliens have divined that the
human race will soon develop the ultimate weapon: a "solaranite bomb" (or "solarbonite") that can
"explode the particles of sunlight" and ultimately destroy the universe. They have attempted eight
times to persuade humanity not to build the bomb, but find themselves unable to even get humanity's
attention. "Plan 9", their plan to resurrect the dead, is their final, desperate attempt. Unbelievably,
this is all claimed to be based on sworn testimony, even though Criswell says it takes place in the future.
Produced and directed by Ed Wood, the movie is widely regarded as a leading candidate for the title of
"worst movie ever made", the film is infamous for "almost starring" Bela Lugosi, since the scenes
featuring Lugosi were not shot with this film in mind at all.
Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964) : martians kidnap Santa Claus
Momar ("Mom Martian") and Kimar ("King Martian") are worried that their martian children are watching too
much Earth television, most notably station KIDD's interview with Santa Claus in his workshop at the
North Pole. So Martian leaders decide to kidnap Santa Claus from Earth and bring him to Mars to make
toys for the children of their planet.
Famous in the "so bad it's good"-category, it has been featured on Mystery Science Theater 3000 and
holds a spot in IMDb's worst 100. Also cited on a 10-worst list in The Book of Lists, The Fifty Worst
Films of All Time, and the 2004 DVD documentary, The 50 Worst Movies Ever Made. Features an early screen
appearance by 1980s film icon Pia Zadora. The Canadian TV channel "Space: The Imagination Station" airs
this bomb every Christmas as a salute to bad sci-fi.