A response to the LiveJournal âWriterâs Blockâ prompt:
What is the worst movie youâve ever seen? Did you sit through it or walk out? What made it so dreadful?
Letâs seeâŠworst movie Iâve ever seen in a theater. Top three candidates:
So bad that the group of friends I was with started heckling the movie, and the rest of the audience joined in. Of course, that means we found something fun about it, so it probably doesnât count. (Similarly, I rather enjoyed Van Helsing as a comedy, even though it doesnât seem to have been intended as one.)
This should have been a great movie. Epic story, all-star castâŠbut it was intensely boring. 16 years later, I barely remember a thing about it other than being bored out of my skull, but the boredom itself left that much of an impression.
On the plus side, it had giant robots blowing stuff up, and they put more thought into the story than I expected them to. And there were certainly good moments spread throughout the film. On the minus side, the visuals were so complex that they were hard to follow. Thatâs a problem I had with the Transformersâ designs in the first film, too â they look insanely cool in still shots, but start them moving and you end up with two clouds of shrapnel fighting each other. Plus Michael Bay has a very different sense of humor than I do, which didnât help. And amazingly enough, the movie was tedious. I donât know how you can possibly take a movie about giant robots and explosions and make it dull enough that I checked my watch at least five times during the film.
Yeah, that one probably deserves the title.
I donât recall ever walking out of a movie before it was finished, unless the movie itself stopped due to technical problems (which has happened a couple of times). Iâve been seriously tempted to switch off some movies Iâve watched at home, though.