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The 50 Worst Movies of All Time
Maxim | 7-02 | n/a

Posted on 06/20/2002 7:36:51 PM PDT by Temple Owl

The 50 Worst Movies of All Time

It’s a scientific fact that four out of five flicks cause headache, nausea, and vomiting. But which cause severe gunbarrelsuckingitis?

Maxim, July 2002

50. Can’t Stop the Music (’80)

By 1980 disco was gasping on life support. Unfortunately, nobody told the Village People it was time to pull the plug. So moviegoers were subjected to this last ode to mirror balls, disguised as an inspirational biopic of how the group’s construction worker, cop, Indian, GI, cowboy, and biker joined forces and learned to spell YMCA.

49. Harley Davidson & the Marlboro Man (’91)

Dress up pretty boy Don Johnson as a cowboy and greaseball Mickey Rourke as a biker and give ’em guns—a drug-trafficking bank is fucking with their local bar! Cool, right? Not even if Philip Michael Thomas were thrown in as the Maytag repairman could this brain-dead buddy pic have sucked tailpipe any harder.

48. Erin Brockovich (’00)

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.

47. Blues Brothers 2000 (’98)

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.

46. A View to a Kill (’85)

In his last appearance as 007, a 58-year-old Roger Moore creaks into action against Silicon Valley blower-upper Christopher Walken and his ultrabeastly gal pal Grace Jones. Although we have a blind allegiance to all Bond films, we feel compelled to go on record saying that anyone who plays the MI6 agent should be young enough to pop a boner.

45. Battle for the Planet of the Apes (’73)

By this fifth installment in the simian saga, the story wasn’t just about monkeys, but apparently being directed, written, and produced by them, too. Battle was slapped together for a third of the original’s budget (the costumes are moth-eaten) and the climactic showdown pits ape against humans in slow school buses.

44. The Sound of Music (’65)

The hiiillls are aliiive with the sound of…us blowing chunks. Baron Von Trapp rules his offspring with an iron hand till peppy nun Julie Andrews brainwashes them to break into songs about baby deer and raindrops on roses—putting us in the uneasy position of feeling relief when Nazis show up to stomp their tea party.

43. A Gnome Named Gnorm (’94)

A Breakfast Club curse? Think about it: Molly and Ally both boarded the Oblivion Express not long after its release, and for the whole of the ’90s, Anthony M. Hall had no happier reason to pull on his acid-washed baggies and lace up the white high tops than this buddy-cop caper, costarring a midget in a rubber gnome costume.

42. Soul Man (’86)

Check it—C. Thomas Howell plays a rich white boy posing as a G in order to wax it at Harvard Law School by overdosing on "suntan pills." Unfortunately, such callous racism prompted hostility among African-Americans that eight years later helped fuel the L.A. riots. To this day costars Leslie Nielsen and James Earl Jones just can’t get along.

41. Exit to Eden (’94)

Why’d they invent Viagra? Because a whole generation of men watched this movie on pay-per-view in their hotel rooms, hoping for some decent soft-core porn. Instead they were treated to the sight of Rosie O’Donnell shoehorned into a leather corset. Director Garry Marshall should refund your eight bucks for this masturbate ’n’ switch.

40. Zardoz (’74)

Yep, Sean Connery traded his license to kill for a red diaper. The year is 2293, and civilization has split between primitive "brutals" and a colony of effete, telepathic intellectuals. See, bad boy Connery stows away in a floating god’s forehead, and, er, never mind.

39. Rhinestone (’84)

Thank God Hollywood finally got off its lazy, formulaic ass and made a musical comedy with Sylvester Stallone and Dolly Parton! Sly nailed the role of an uneducated brickhead whose voice could neuter a cat. And Dolly gives an unforgettable performance as…a country-western singer. Let’s hope Mr. Stallone cowrites a sequel!

38. Battlefield Earth (’00)

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.

37. Speed 2: Cruise Control (’97)

Hey, pleasure boaters—make way! A whiny computer genius who’s got copper poisoning has hijacked a jewel-laden cruise ship that’s careening out of control at 12 knots! We hope Jason Patric was wearing a life vest, because as Sandra Bullock’s new LAPD boyfriend he helped send Speed 3 to a watery grave.

36. Under the Cherry Moon (’86)

We’d change our name to an unpronounceable symbol, too, if it were connected to this cinematic pit stain. Ditching the funky vibe of Purple Rain, Prince bored fans shitless by prancing around the Mediterranean as the most implausible con man ever and falling head-over-platform-heels in love with rich bitch Kristin Scott Thomas.

35. Junior (’94)

Apparently, our fearsome T-800 grew a vagina during the filming of Twins and Kindergarten Cop and then got knocked up like a drunk virgin on prom night. But the weird science here is that this Ivan Reitman comedy spooge paved the way for Arnold’s redheaded stepchildren, like End of Days and Collateral Damage. If only he’d been on the pill…

34. Mandingo (’75)

We’re not sure who set back race relations more, James Earl Ray or the makers of this Old South soap opera. Because, apparently, slavery was mostly about bad actors getting it on in the hayloft and delivering lines like "Pleasure me, you ebony wench!" It’ll take hypnosis to forget seeing that English neighbor from The Jeffersons inspect a slave for hemorrhoids.

33. Cobra (’86)

Our love for plotless, gratuitously violent movies is matched only by our hatred of murderous cults that dance with their axes à la the musical Stomp. Sure, Stallone fires his twin Colt 45s nonstop, but unfortunately none of the bullets bounce off Brigitte Nielsen’s rubber breasts and kill Cobra’s cornfed sidekick and the obligatory asshole police captain.

32. Scenes From a Mall (’91)

Hey, it’s another brilliant, intellectual, thought-provoking Woody Allen movie! Oh, boy! And Bette Midler plays his wife! They argue a lot in a shopping mall! And—are you sitting down?—Bill Irwin’s in it, as a mime! All right, mime jokes! Hey, wait…where you going? I thought we were gonna rent something together…

31. Spice World (’97)

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.

30. Xanadu (’80)

Hey, we understand that Hollywood was doing handstands in a mountain of coke back then, but Olivia Newton-John as a Greek muse who inspires an artist to create a roller disco rink? Come on! The finale, complete with codger Gene Kelly on skates, is an endless, chaotic clusterfuck that killed off musicals for years. So we owe it that much.

29. Cocktail (’88)

It pretends to be a drama about New York’s singles scene, but when was the last time you saw some douchebag bartender take five goddamn minutes to mix a drink—and be wildly cheered on for making a show of it? And while we never see Tom Cruise slurp a brain eraser off Elisabeth Shue’s rack, he does perfect the selfish-yuppie role he’s run with ever since.

28. Cool as Ice (’91)

Friends, have pity on Vanilla Ice. Is there one among you who didn’t once sport a jackass haircut or dress like a bargain-hunting Martian pimp at some point in the early ’90s? You, private citizen, can burn all photographic records of such excesses. Ice will have this albatross around his neck long after his razor-shaped eyebrows have gone gray and his truss hangs down past the crotch of his neon-yellow genie pants.

27. Clambake (’67)

When he wasn’t gorging on fried Crisco-and-jelly sandwiches, Elvis was cranking out cheapo musicals—and this one ranks pompadour and sideburns above the rest on the Shit-o-meter. Sure, the King looks stiff playing an oil baron who trades places with a lowly water-skiing instructor, but Clambake gave the world such classics as, um, "Hey, Hey, Hey."

26. Godzilla (’98)

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!

25. Howard the Duck (’86)

Every high school had one of those kids who could beat the odds and get every question wrong on a true-false test. With Howard the Duck, George Lucas was that kid. From the man who made Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, and the Indiana Jones movies we get this militantly unfunny flick about a cigar-smoking duck.

24. Double Team (’97)

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.

23. Heartbeeps (’81)

According to Amnesty International, Iraqi political prisoners are forced to watch this robot love story as a form of torture. Ouch! As runaway domestic droids, Andy Kaufman and Bernadette Peters make toaster ovens seem charismatic, sputtering lines like "I operate most efficiently with maximum data input." Robot humor slays us!

22. Psycho (’98)

Cross-dressing serial slasher Norman Bates seems perfectly rational compared with the loon who thought it’d be neat to remake—shot for shot—this Hitchcock classic. The only innovation in this pointless experiment is how director Gus Van Sant managed to film Anne Heche’s shower scene without revealing that she’s actually a 10-year-old boy.

21. Hook (’91)

"Look, honey—Peter Pan!" How many hapless parents accidentally subjected their impressionable children to the hideous spectacle of Robin Williams in tights? Oh, and the tykes won’t spend a few years in therapy sorting out Dustin Hoffman’s menacing drag queen Captain Hook? Just sit Junior in front of an autopsy video—it’ll be far less traumatic.

20. Dune (’84)

The United Nations Geological Survey maintains an exhaustively detailed database of arable land throughout the world. And according to its latest data, it is not possible to grow enough marijuana for this movie to make even the slightest bit of sense. There simply isn’t room.

19. The Last Movie (’71)

Whoa, deep, man. There’s this movie stunt man played by a really stoned-looking Dennis Hopper, see? He shoots a Western in Peru and then sticks around afterward, only to be crucified by the movie-crazed natives. See, it’s like a parable about the death of colonialism and Western culture and stuff. Like, is that heavy or what? Pass the Long Bong Silver, dude.

18. Moment by Moment (’78)

Ever wonder what could possibly make you kill yourself? How about watching a young John Travolta prance around in tighty-whities for two hours and repeatedly bang his mom? At least that’s our interpretation of his creepy relationship with Lily Tomlin, his domineering 40-year-old look-alike lover. Coincidentally, Moment was released the same year as the Jim Jones mass suicide at Jonestown.

17. Gymkata (’85)

If you need a covert operative to work in a hostile environment that just happens to be littered with gymnastics equipment, Johnathan Cabot is your man. U.S. gymnast Kurt Thomas plays Cabot, who fights for America’s right to build a missile base in tiny Parmistan. On the plus side, the cinematographer helps make diminutive Thomas look human-size.

16. The Thin Red Line (’98)

"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.

15. Moulin Rouge! (’01)

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.

14. Nell (’94)

Meersa arna boorba zoo zoo…Bafourna moola hooky hooky la la low… Bisguh foofa Jodie Foster la la la…bazoozoo koo koo koo! Loo loo Liam Neeson munga munga Natasha Richardson git gat giddle anna gat gasay… Loo loo lee. Mecka lecka hi mecka hiney ho chippa. Translation: Despite heavy star power, this movie fucking sucked.

13. The Godfather Part III (’90)

Not even if Tom Green were cast as Michael Corleone and the plot revolved around an Osama scat video could this Coppola turd be any more of a disgrace to its two flawless predecessors. With no Duvall, a wretched Sofia Coppola, and impossible-to-meet expectations, this baby was released stillborn on Christmas day.

12. Cutthroat Island (’95)

The $92 million idea: Give Geena Davis a sword and put her in situations where her blouse is likely to get ripped. Throw in a love interest with whomever—Matthew Modine? Sure, fine—and let Geena’s husband, Cliffhanger director Renny Harlin, hold the megaphone. The result? An $11 million gross. Oh, we get it—it’s a comedy!

11. Dirty Dancing (’87)

Poor, timid Jennifer Grey will never get a chance to have the time of her life with the unimaginably heterosexual Patrick Swayze. But wait! Swayze’s tramp dance partner just had an abortion! Love triumphs thanks to a fetus ex machina. Yep, nobody puts Baby in the corner…or in anything like a real movie since this stink-o-rama.

10. Little Nicky (’00)

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.

9. When Harry Got Mail in Seattle

Let’s see: Meg Ryan crinkles her pug nose while she yaks (and yaks and yaks) about finding love with the right man. And Tom Hanks (or maybe Billy Crystal) is a normal, joke-cracking guy until he suddenly realizes he isn’t complete without—get this—Meg Ryan. And pug nose wears some funny hats. We forgetting anything?

8. It’s Pat: The Movie (’94)

News flash: One-trick Saturday Night Live skits that suck don’t stop sucking up on the big screen. A Night at the Roxbury, Coneheads, Superstar—it’s enough to make a goddamn bukkake video. We never cared whether Pat, played by Julia "Who?" Sweeney, was a he or a she as long as it can go screw itself.

7. The English Patient (’96)

As we had to keep our eyelids open with toothpicks, we can only remember that this wannabe epic was mind-numbingly boring. Maybe subtitled, too. Basically, a WWII pilot played by Ralph Fiennes gets shot down, burned to a crisp, and then meets a hottie nurse. But that’s where the hijinks end and our suffering begins.

6. The Postman (’97)

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.

5. Staying Alive (’83)

Hollywood suit: "John, babe, in contrast to cool, streetwise Tony in Saturday Night Fever, we dress you up in a banana hammock, rub you down with baby oil, and…hello, Broadway!" Travolta: "Where do I sign?" Directed by Sly Stallone, Alive proved to be the first duker in a decade-long string of crappy Travolta flicks.

4. Armageddon (’98)

Hmm, a Texas-size asteroid is headed toward Earth, so NASA sends up a dipshit oil rig crew to nuke it. This idiotic story—which makes Chitty Chitty Bang Bang look like a documentary—is told through a nonstop hiccup of sappy scenes, including one where Liv Tyler and Ben Affleck playfully feed each other animal crackers. At that point we tossed our cookies.

3. Patch Adams (’98)

The Mad Libs script: Robin is a (noun) in a (noun) whose superiors are put off by his unconventional antics. However, the (plural noun) all love him, and in the end Robin’s gently comic, sweetly philosophical love for humanity wins everybody over. In this case Williams is a doctor who yuks around in clown shoes in front of game-over cancer patients.

2. Steel Magnolias (’89)

Gaggle o’ squawk boxes Sally Field, Daryl Hannah, Shirley MacLaine, Olympia Dukakis, and Julia Roberts are cast as small-town beauty parlor gossip queens. And what do you get? A weepy chick flick so menstrual it single-handedly emasculates Ron Jeremy’s entire body of work. Why is it a tearjerker? Who knows? Somebody broke a nail or something.

1. Batman & Robin (’97)

Holy Batcrap! You had to smell a stink bomb when pantywaist Robin got equal billing with the Dark Knight. How did window-dresser-turned-hack-director Joel Schumacher demolish a cherished franchise? He forgot it was about BATMAN! Schwarzenegger camping it up as Mr. Freeze…and Alicia Silverstone overstuffing her Batgirl tights…and given Batty’s prominent new codpiece, let’s hope the Superfriends have a "Don’t ask, don’t tell" policy. Ugh, enough.


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To: jz638
Where's "Breakin'"? or "Breakin' 2"?

LOL! That's what I was thinking! At least they caught "Cool As Ice." What a piece of MST3K sh!t that "film" was...

61 posted on 06/21/2002 8:38:32 AM PDT by Future Snake Eater
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To: SamAdams76
"Warriors...Come Out And Play-ay!"

Is that the one where the guy puts those bottle on his fingers. That's an old one.

EYES WIDE SHUT, Tom Cruz and Nicole Kidman. The WORST I've ever seen!

62 posted on 06/21/2002 8:44:32 AM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: Jhensy
"Manos" The Hands of Fate

Oh dear GOD! LOL! I'm forever scarred by that movie as are Joel Hodgson, Mike Nelson, Kevin Murphy, and everyone else who ever laid eyes on it! Get ready for this: I actually witnessed an online discussion saying that "Manos" was actually a good movie, and that MST3K had edited certain "good" scenes. Yeah, right!

In addition to that "nugget" of film, I also submit the MST3K classics "Skydivers" and "Hobgoblins." Those two may actually beat "Manos" in crappiness.

63 posted on 06/21/2002 8:44:46 AM PDT by Future Snake Eater
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To: SamAdams76
"Warriors...Come Out And Play-ay!"

Is that the one where the guy puts those bottle on his fingers. That's an old one.

EYES WIDE SHUT, Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman. The WORST I've ever seen!

64 posted on 06/21/2002 8:44:53 AM PDT by MotleyGirl70
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To: Illbay
You are NOT a guy, whatever your sex.

You are right, I am not a guy!... So what gave me away? - Was it Steel Magnolias?

[smiling sweetly and batting eyes ]

65 posted on 06/21/2002 8:49:33 AM PDT by HairOfTheDog
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To: BluesDuke
Jaws III - This fish story was a turkey.

Come on, now, if you mention "Jaws III," you HAVE to mention "Jaws IV: The Revenge." LOL! "This time it's personal" the movie's tagline screeched. Riiiight. "Austin Powers'" ill-tempered mutant sea bass was more terrifying...

May I also submit before the FReeper committee "Superman IV: The Quest For Peace." Superman decides on his own due to a little boy's prodding to invade every nuclear-armed country and disarm them, presumably against their will, but no one ever says anything to him. Then throw in Gene Hackman in one of his worst-written and acted performances EVER and some mush-brained "supervillain" who is afraid of the dark or something...pure cinematic vomit. Oh, and there's a semi-evil rich, white guy as well.

66 posted on 06/21/2002 8:53:09 AM PDT by Future Snake Eater
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To: Jagdgewehr
The Quick And The Dead

Call me crazy, but I actually kinda liked that flick. Maybe it was Russell Crowe, maybe it was Hackman as an evil guy, maybe it was the fact that BOTH Gary Sinise AND Leonardo DiCaprio are killed in it! That'll teach you to muddle your way through "The Stand," Gary...

67 posted on 06/21/2002 8:56:25 AM PDT by Future Snake Eater
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To: HairOfTheDog
STOP IT! You know as a true-born Southerner I can't resist a "Magnolia" batting her eyelashes!

*RRRRRRRowf!*

68 posted on 06/21/2002 8:58:43 AM PDT by Illbay
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To: Future Snake Eater
I didn't care for The Quick and the Dead, but I generally like anything with Gene Hackman in it.
I attribute my nausea to the performance of Sharon Stone in that movie.
However, the other points you mention are the positive aspects of the movie.
69 posted on 06/21/2002 9:37:21 AM PDT by Jagdgewehr
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To: BluesDuke
I think if Videodrome was made today, it would have been okay. It was made 20 years too soon.
70 posted on 06/21/2002 10:52:22 AM PDT by Ladybug1
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To: Temple Owl

How could they leave this one out????


71 posted on 06/21/2002 11:27:24 AM PDT by mjf
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To: Temple Owl
('79) All That Jazz.... Chief Brodie on Broadway.
72 posted on 06/21/2002 11:34:41 AM PDT by MissMillie
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To: Future Snake Eater
Come on, now, if you mention "Jaws III," you HAVE to mention "Jaws IV: The Revenge." LOL!

Awwww...do I have to? *smirk*

Another cinematic turkey: Dick Tracy.
73 posted on 06/21/2002 1:26:21 PM PDT by BluesDuke
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To: Ladybug1
I think if Videodrome was made today, it would have been okay. It was made 20 years too soon.

I don't know that you're either wrong or right, necessarily. But when I think a little on it, I would have to say that even today Videodrome as made in 1982 would still have turned out a turkey. Ahead of the time or along with the time, bad writing and bad casting will not redeem a film no matter how sound the premise - and Videodrome had a remarkably prescient premise.
74 posted on 06/21/2002 1:30:16 PM PDT by BluesDuke
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To: Illbay
That's the one that, I believe, sunk quickly out of sight as soon as it was released, and took an entire studio with it, wasn't it?

You're thinking, I think, of Heaven's Gate, which almost buried Columbia Pictures. Steven Gaines has written a book about it, the title escapes me and I've not had the chance to read it, but I'm told it tells a rather amazing story of hubris the sort which was, at the time, unprecedented even in Hollywood...
75 posted on 06/21/2002 1:33:15 PM PDT by BluesDuke
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To: BluesDuke
Another cinematic turkey: Dick Tracy.

You mean you didn't enjoy 10 minutes of gunfighting while Dick Tracy stood around in an empty room doing high school physics calculations? It's a classic!

76 posted on 06/21/2002 1:33:35 PM PDT by Future Snake Eater
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To: Future Snake Eater
You mean you didn't enjoy 10 minutes of gunfighting while Dick Tracy stood around in an empty room doing high school physics calculations? It's a classic!

I can watch that watching an occasional rerun of Hawaiian Eye or Surfside 6. And those shows only last half an hour...
77 posted on 06/21/2002 1:36:12 PM PDT by BluesDuke
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To: Temple Owl
I expect that the reason this stinker didn't make the list is that I warned everyone else in the world off from seeing it...

Ironically the website where I got the pic claims that this is New Zealand's best contribution to the Sci Fi genre. If this is true, their other contributions should be considered hazardous waste.
78 posted on 06/21/2002 2:55:23 PM PDT by Crusader Rabbit
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To: BluesDuke
It was the special effects that I was refering too, I didn't even think about the writing. You're right thought, the writing would need a major overhall and they would have to find good actors, but they are rather hard to find today. They would probably end up getting Richard Gere and Julia Roberts. What a treat.
79 posted on 06/21/2002 7:06:10 PM PDT by Ladybug1
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To: Ladybug1
James Woods was (is) a good actor, but pairing him with Deborah Harry wasn't exactly the brightest casting - to the extent that she could act (put it this way: as an actress, she was a hell of a singer), hers wasn't exactly a style or a sensibility that could have knitted well with his.
80 posted on 06/21/2002 7:11:59 PM PDT by BluesDuke
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