John Dies At The End. Weird, sci-fi horror comedy that nobody saw
Budget <$1 million, box office $141,951
The story was originally written as a serial and released on a web site for free before getting sold as a book, the movie cuts out big sections that makes some scenes meaningless or contradicting earlier scenes. I think it’s pretty fun to watch and it has a low budget sci-fi charm, but I get why it didn’t do well. Given another screenwriter/director I think it could be retried.
Fight Club
Budget: $62 million.
Domestic Earnings: $37 million.That’s not really fair. How were they even supposed to market/promote a movie in which the first 2 rules are to not talk about it.
Ginger (the segway) was supposed to change the way cities were made
Blade Runner 2049
Yeah, I don’t get why it’s so underrated.
I don’t have a favorite but a few I liked a lot.
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension: great fun crazy cast.
Cirque du Freak: The Vampire’s Assistant. Such a strange world. I would have loved to see sequels.
Pandorum: Clever scifi horror. Unique situation and setting.
Rustlers Rhapsody: The main character is a genre savvy singing cowboy from 1940s westerns transported to a 1980s western. The bad guys have to team up with some spaghetti western villains.
Cutthroath Island. Basically no CGI, most of the stuff you see are done for real and Geena Davis did her own stunts.
and it was partially shot in my tiny country of Malta! So one of the reasons I am also slightly fond of this one
Shocked nobody mentioned The Shawshank Redemption yet. Box office flop, they had to re-release it back to theaters after it got nominated for 7 Oscars and it only really took off with home video.
I liked Green Lantern.
The one I always immediately think of is Dude, Where’s My Car? because I remember how Siskel and Ebert gave it two thumbs down and called it the worst film they had ever seen, as well as it generally bombing in reviews at the time, but it was fucking hilarious and is when I started thinking maybe the critics are just pretentious snobs; I mean the only thing they ever do seem to like are artsy-fartsy things and super old shit that they probably have nostalgia for because they were new when they were young.
Critics are comparing a film to thousands of movies whereas most people will compare it to a few dozen. Some subjects get boring when you have seen this premise 100x times before. That’s why sometimes critics and audience scores can have such a huge gap.
I actually liked Ishtar.
The Warrior’s Way (2010)
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Great movie, though a bit disappointed that the ending was so awkward, since the movie director wanted to go with the underaged ship instead of the consenting adults, and had to scramble to change it when the final graphic novel was released.
Which, honestly? I don’t understand, since they made it clear halfway through the series that that pairing was not going to come back.
The Last Action Hero
Equilibrium. I don’t care what people say, gun-kata is cool. lol
Idiocracy.