The 20 Worst Movies Ever Made Taste Of Cinema 2015 List [portable] -
Perhaps the most controversial aspect of the 2015 list is its willingness to go after recent, mainstream failures. The inclusion of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009) is telling. Michael Bay’s sequel is not incompetent in the way The Room is; it is technically proficient, deafeningly loud, and racially problematic (the twins Skids and Mudflap). Taste of Cinema argues that a film this expensive, this popular, and this cynically constructed is somehow more offensive than a cheap B-movie. It represents the worst of the studio system: a bloated, soulless product designed to sell toys and popcorn, not to tell a story. By placing it on the list alongside The Room , the editors suggest that there are two kinds of "worst": the lovable failure of passion and the hateful success of commerce.
Note: This entry is controversial. While the 2010 remake was viewed as a standard horror flick, the 1978 original was included on the list for its grueling, protracted depiction of sexual violence. Taste of Cinema argued that the film lacked the artistic nuance to justify its exploitative content, making it a "worst" film not for a lack of skill, but for a lack of morality. the 20 worst movies ever made taste of cinema 2015 list
: This Adam Sandler vehicle was seen as a wasted high-concept idea, ruined by poor execution and the leading man's typical tropes. Perhaps the most controversial aspect of the 2015
Joel Schumacher’s neon-soaked nightmare effectively killed the Batman franchise for nearly a decade. While the film has gained a camp following recently, in 2015 it was still viewed as the nadir of the blockbuster format—plastic, cartoonish, and cynical. Taste of Cinema argues that a film this
In 2015, cinema-goers were treated to masterpieces like Mad Max: Fury Road and Carol , but the year also produced some of the most widely reviled films in recent memory. Popular film site released a definitive list titled " The 20 Worst Movies of 2015 ," chronicling the commercial disasters and critical failures that left audiences wanting their money back.
John Travolta’s sci-fi pet project is a case study in excess. With Dutch angles that never end, a plot that makes no sense to non-Scientologists, and "Psychlo" aliens that look ridiculous, it swept the Razzies upon release. It remains the benchmark for sci-fi hubris.
German director Uwe Boll is a fixture on worst-of lists. Taste of Cinema selected Bloodrayne (or sometimes Alone in the Dark ) as the representative for Boll's filmography. It is a vampire film known for its wasted cast (Ben Kingsley, Michelle Rodriguez) and nonsensical plot, emblematic of the "video game adaptation curse."