Rotten Tomatoes Movie Reviews the Beat That My Heart Skipped

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Plenty of bad movies get rated on Rotten Tomatoes, merely it's rare to see a film score a apartment 0% without a single critic to defend something almost the film. If you didn't think it was possible, take a walk down the cinematic hall of shame and feast your optics on some of the worst movies (according to Rotten Tomatoes) to date.

Each film on this listing has managed to attain a flat 0% rating, implying a time suck of epic proportions should yous cull to watch them. Obviously, these movies should only be viewed at your own gamble. Consider yourself warned!

Wait Who's Talking At present (1993)

Although the original Await Who's Talking film scored a mere 57% among critics, information technology was a viewer favorite, which prompted the creators to make non one, simply two sequels. The first two featured John Travolta, Kirstie Alley and a series of talking babies. Cute, right?

Photograph Courtesy: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

In the third picture, Look Who's Talking Now, the filmmakers instead swapped the babies out with rough talking dogs who brand constant sexual references. Very kid-friendly, right? Information technology's impossible to understand how anyone making the pic failed to consider this strategy would completely alienate the target audience and critics.

MAC and Me (1988)

Although Hollywood may occasionally be able to breadbasket a bad moving-picture show, at that place's nothing information technology hates more than a breathy rip-off. Such was the case when MAC and Me was released in 1988. The story features a young, wheelchair-bound boy who meets MAC (Mysterious Alien Creature), an alien who needs help finding his way habitation. Sound familiar?

Photo Courtesy: MAC and Me/ IMDb

Evidently, the filmmakers thought that putting the poor child in a wheelchair would keep everyone from realizing they had obviously hijacked the plot of E.T. It didn't work — Duh! — and critics weren't shy about letting everyone know what they thought virtually it.

Jaws: The Revenge (1987)

As Steven Spielberg told a film festival audience in 1975, "Making a sequel to anything is just a cheap carny trick." The fact that he understands what so many other filmmakers fail to grasp, still, didn't keep iii sequels to his striking flick Jaws from beingness fabricated by other misguided industry professionals.

Photograph Courtesy: Universal Pictures / Handout/ Getty Images

The tales of terrified beachgoers just kept coming until finally Jaws: The Revenge, the franchise's quaternary motion picture, finally sank things in one case and for all. The motion-picture show's nonsensical plot, bad special effects and sloppy execution were more critics or moviegoers could handle with a direct face.

Staying Alive (1983)

Ever noticed that there's something about dance movies that seems to inspire a million sequels? Before the days of the Step Upwardly franchise, Staying Alive led the way toward insipid trip the light fantastic moving-picture show franchises of the future. Unfortunately, this questionable sequel to the successful Saturday Dark Fever came nowhere near the success of its predecessor.

Photo Courtesy: Jack Mitchell/ Getty Images

John Travolta returned as Tony Manero in a plot set up six years after he won the legendary disco contest in the first moving-picture show. The plot by and large serves as a filler for additional dancing that the filmmakers mistakenly counted on to comport the motion-picture show.

Bolero (1984)

Poor Bo Derek. One day, her career was off to a nifty commencement, and the side by side, her married man, John Derek, had a non-so-brilliant idea called Bolero. Written and directed past John himself, the film features Bo as a recently graduated woman in the 1920s who traipses all over the globe in an attempt to lose her virginity.

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The whole matter turned out to be ane of those movies that's funny for all the wrong reasons, and information technology was largely considered a huge mess by critics. On the other hand, it won 6 of its ten Razzie award nominations. Mayhap that counts for something — or not.

Dream a Little Dream (1989)

You know you have failed in a spectacular manner when non even teen heartthrob Corey Feldman could save your '80s movie. Such was the example with Dream a Lilliputian Dream, a bizarre story most an elderly couple who undertakes a mystical experiment.

Photo Courtesy: Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

As a consequence, they cease up trapped in the bodies of two teenagers, whose lives don't turn out to exist what they had expected. Not surprisingly, the flick itself turned out to be epically incoherent. Roger Ebert dubbed it "an aggressively unwatchable movie," while other critics questioned whether the writers had any thought what they had created.

Problem Child (1990)

A couple adopts a young boy who turns out to exist an absolute nightmare who is determined to brand their lives hell. While this might audio similar a solid premise for a horror movie — mayhap information technology would have worked that way — Problem Child actually tried to present itself as a slapstick comedy.

Photo Courtesy: Trouble Child/ IMDb

The trouble was that none of the jokes were the least fleck funny, and the plot itself came across every bit more mean-spirited than fun. The event was a mess of a picture with a lead character that neither adults nor children could bring themselves to sympathise, let alone similar.

Megaforce (1982)

Megaforce was supposed to relate the tale of an elite grouping of international warriors, but information technology turned out to exist something well-nigh critics had to forcefulness themselves to watch. As i reviewer put it, the film was "the kind of bad that makes you wish yous were somewhere, anywhere else."

Photograph Courtesy: Paul Harris/Getty Images

The movie barely grossed a fourth of its $20 1000000 budget, little of which appeared to have been used to meliorate annihilation nigh the film. With bad dialogue, cheesy special effects and a ridiculous plot, Megaforce concluded up existence the most unintentionally funny activity movie of all fourth dimension.

Highlander two: The Quickening (1991)

Few movies brought fans, critics and fifty-fifty its ain coiffure together in mutual disgust quite like Highlander 2. The original Highlander at to the lowest degree accomplished a cult following, merely the sequel pretty much just borrowed the championship and admittedly none of the good parts of the storyline.

Photo Courtesy: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

The filmmakers bizarrely tossed much of the original flick's plotline and twisted the premise to include aliens battling on an environmentally plagued Globe in 2024. Rumor has it that even director Russell Mulcahy asked to replace his name with a fake one simply was forbidden past his contract from bailing out.

American Anthem (1986)

If you take never heard of this '80's gymnastics story, then you're not alone. The story centers around a young male gymnast who works through various issues, meets a girl and trains for the Olympics — you lot know, the usual athlete coming-of-age story. Who amend to play him than an actual Olympic gold medal gymnast, correct?

Photo Courtesy: Ron Galella/Ron Galella Drove via Getty Images

Patently not. While production didn't have to worry about grooming Mitch Gaylord to practise the gymnastics, they probably should have focused a niggling more on training him to act. The sloppy story and overload of cliches came in 2d only to his less than gold-medal interim performance.

Police Academy iv: Citizens on Patrol (1987)

You know how even the funniest joke loses all its hilarity if the same person keeps telling it over and over? That's sort of what happened with the Police Academy franchise. While the original was hilarious, nobody was laughing anymore past the end of the sixth sequel.

Photo Courtesy: Michael Ochs Athenaeum/Getty Images

Among the about painful of the follow-ups was the quaternary installment, in which Commandant Lassard decides to recruit civilians to work alongside the cops. The movie seems less concerned with a plot of any sort and plays out more similar a string of gags tied together in the longest YouTube compilation always.

Deadfall (1993)

Based on the cover lone, Deadfall looks like a movie that could concenter plenty of unsuspecting viewers. It has Nicolas Cage, James Coburn and fifty-fifty Charlie Sheen amidst its cast, not to mention a Coppola in the manager's chair.

Photo Courtesy: Ambush/IMDb

As it turns out, it's just a lesson in never judging a book — or a movie — by its comprehend. The motion picture is basically an endeavour at motion picture noir gone terribly wrong. Although the filmmakers managed to get the look right, they forgot the part where y'all actually need a strong plot to make the whole thing work.

A Thousand Words (2012)

When your movie is shot four years before anyone dares to really release it in theaters, you know you're in for a rough ride. A Yard Words made the fault of taking the hilarious Eddie Tater and pretty much forcing him to pull off an hour and a one-half of recorded silence.

Photograph Courtesy: A Thousand Words/ IMDb

Why? Considering if his character spoke as well much, he would be doomed to become a magical tree in his backyard. By the time the film was over, audiences everywhere were more desperate for White potato to regain his spoken language than his character was.

Bucky Larson: Born to Be a Star (2011)

Despite its proper noun, this film ironically did more than to tank the career of lead role player Nick Swardson than help information technology. If y'all didn't run across information technology, fear not. Information technology's pretty much just 1 long joke that keeps struggling to tell itself for the near painful 96 minutes e'er.

Photo Courtesy: Bucky Larson: Born to Be a Star/ IMDb

You get a socially challenged loser kid who moves to Fifty.A. to follow in his porn-star parents' footsteps. Unless the previous sentence made y'all express joy hysterically, and so trust us when we assure you that you didn't miss anything. Seriously, it doesn't get any funnier from there.

Gotti (2018)

Although it was released a mere 2 years agone, Gotti has already gained the popular vote for the worst mob movie of all time. John Travolta stars as infamous mobster John Gotti in this biopic, which attempts to cram the guy'south entire life into 105 minutes.

Photo Courtesy: Jim Spellman/WireImage/ Getty Images

Gotti was many things, and an interesting guy was certainly one of them. Unfortunately, the motion picture fails to capture this fact and also manages to be ridiculously wearisome in its attempt to entertain. One critic actually said he would prefer to "wake up side by side to a severed horse head than always watch Gotti again." Yikes!

Nighttime Crimes (2018)

In the '90s, most of us thought of Jim Carrey every bit the hysterically goofy star of films like Ace Ventura: Pet Detective and Impaired and Dumber. So, one day, he suddenly stunned the globe with his obvious dramatic talent in movies similar The Truman Show and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

Photo Courtesy: Dark Crimes/ IMDb

So, when Nighttime Crimes came forth, it seemed promising. The movie cast Carey every bit a detective, and he did a pretty practiced task with what he was given. That said, the flick was less the thriller it was intended to be and mostly but too agonizing to really lookout man.

The Ridiculous 6 (2015)

It seems similar nosotros all fell so in love with Adam Sandler during his early career that we just can't bring ourselves to surrender on him. It was probably his early on success that made him rich plenty to first bankrolling his own movies, and things have been going downhill ever since.

Photo Courtesy: Gregg DeGuire/WireImage/ Getty Images

Among the worst of his creations is The Ridiculous 6, a would-be Western satire that is just painful to sentry. Aside from its lame jokes, the flick is insanely racist and disrespectful toward Native Americans — to the degree that several Native American actors walked off the set up.

Max Steel (2016)

Non all superhero movies are created equal, as Max Steel will be the get-go to grudgingly admit. While many action films spawn toy lines, this one did things backwards and attempted to brand a movie out of an old toy from the late '90s.

Photo Courtesy: IMDb

The movie tells the story of a boy named Max who meets a metal alien being that can wrap around him like a knock-off Iron Man adjust. The rest of the movie follows arrange with one superhero cliche after another, none of which are executed half as well as they are in the films they shamelessly mimic.

Simon Sez (1999)

Call up when Dennis Rodman was still around? Well, of class, there was someone out at that place who only had to ride the coattails of his 15 minutes of fame past dropping him into an activeness pic. Hence, Simon Sez, the sequel to Double Take, was born.

Photo Courtesy: Simon Sez/ IMDb

While Rodman at to the lowest degree had Jean-Claude Van Damme to back him up in the first picture show, he has to resort to teaming upwards with a pair of random figurer hacking monks in the sequel. Set to spend the whole movie wishing he would just requite information technology up and do a couple of dunks instead.

Render to the Blue Lagoon (1991)

Although The Blue Lagoon didn't even garner a 10% fresh rating from critics in 1980, that didn't terminate someone out there from thinking a sequel would all the same exist a bang-up idea. 1991 saw the ill-blighted release of Render to the Blue Lagoon, which fared even worse than the original.

Photo Courtesy: Columbia Pictures/Getty Images

The motion picture plopped then-teenagers Milla Jovovich and Brian Krause onto a desert island, threw in a little romance and a lot of flesh, and hoped for the best. Unfortunately, the movie tanked and was even deemed by one critic to be "for pervs and frustrated holidaymakers only." Ouch.

The Garbage Pail Kids Movie (1987)

Back in the '80s, in that location was a card collecting tendency featuring the Garbage Pail Kids. With characters meant to be knock-offs of Cabbage Patch Kids, the cards featured kids that were super gross in means that but young boys find fascinating.

Photo Courtesy: The Garbage Pail Kids Movie/ IMDb

To the horror of parents everywhere, someone decided to turn the trend into a truly terrifying live-action film. While the cartoonish creatures may accept looked harmless enough on the cards, their puppet counterparts were the stuff that nightmares — and years of intense therapy — were made of.

Top Dog (1994)

While Chuck Norris may have spawned a series of hysterical memos detailing his epic levels of greatness, Top Dog is his Achilles Heel that refuses to die. How could an activeness-comedy starring not only Norris but also an ambrosial dog perchance get wrong?

Photo Courtesy: Top Dog/ IMDb

Well, the first mistake was inserting our heroes into a "family-friendly" film laden with Neo-Nazis terrorists and White Supremacists. (What?) The second was having the poor taste to release information technology 2 weeks after the Oklahoma City bombings. All this added up to an epic fail that was virtually booed out of the box office.

Jury Duty (1995)

This Pauly Shore bomb was enough to go out most moving picture fans preferring actual jury duty to sticking effectually until the terminal credits rolled on this picture. The tale revolves around an bromidic slacker who gets the brilliant idea to sign up for jury duty and then he tin can have advantage of the free room and board. (Exactly where is this jury duty?)

Photo Courtesy: TriStar/Getty Images

The remainder of the picture show mostly focuses on him coming up with the most annoying ways possible to keep the case going, simply so he doesn't lose his temporary digs. Past the cease, you're sure to be but as frustrated as his swain jurors.

Ed (1996)

You could nearly hear the collective shatter of the hearts of Friends fans around the earth when this bad boy flop came out. The sports one-act featured Matt LeBlanc — of Joey Tribbiani fame — and a lovable, baseball-playing chimpanzee named Ed. What could become incorrect?

Photo Courtesy: Ed/ IMDb

So much. Although the premise could have been a solid child feature in the correct hands, the filmmakers fell back on a string of potty jokes and very lilliputian else to make the movie funny. The whole thing only seemed like such a waste product for LeBlanc's one-act skills, and it didn't do the chimp whatsoever favors either.

3 Strikes (2000)

Starring Brian Hooks and written by the aforementioned guy who penned the hysterical Friday, this one-act gem seemed destined to be a winner. Wrong! By the time it was all said and washed, critics were ready to lock this one up and throw abroad the primal.

Photograph Courtesy: iii Strikes/ IMDb

The plot centers around a two-strike felon who is trying his best to stay out of trouble, a task that turns out to be surprisingly complicated. The flick relies mostly on super lowbrow humor, which might accept been excusable if it had really managed to be funny.

Redline (2007)

You know those deal bin DVDs that await like dollar store versions of popular movies? Redline is pretty much their king. Imagine The Fast and the Furious just without the plotline and with women depicted equally nothing more than arm candy. That pretty much sums up the movie.

Photograph Courtesy: M. Phillips/WireImage for May Day Product/ Getty Images

Rather than attempt to tell a story of any sort, the moving-picture show is a blatant vanity project meant to show off a agglomeration of flashy cars, complete with the calendar girl side pieces. Salve your time and flip through a auto calendar at a truck stop instead.

The Nutcracker in 3D (2010)

Seriously, how do you even mess up The Nutcracker? Sadly, this misguided children's film pulled it off, much to the dismay of horrified film critics everywhere. The Hollywood Reporter chosen it "an apparent Scrooge-like attempt by Russian filmmaker Andrei Konchalovsky to forever ruin children's associations with the classic Yuletide ballet."

Photo Courtesy: The Nutcracker in 3D/ IMDb

Despite the moving-picture show's solid cast, which included Elle Fanning and Nathan Lane, information technology veered so far abroad from the much-loved traditional tale that it became something else entirely. You had ane job, Nutcracker. Pace abroad from the 3D spectacles and stick to the beloved story.

National Lampoon'due south Gilded Diggers (2003)

This sincerely misguided attempt at a comedy stars Will Friedle, who played the lovably bumbling Eric Matthews on Boy Meets World, and Chris Owen as the two least funny guys in any comedy ever. The hijinks begin when the boys make up one's mind to marry ii older women, in hopes that they will soon die and leave them a large inheritance.

Photo Courtesy: Mike FANOUS/ Getty Images

Soon, everyone is trying to murder anybody else, and the mystery of why this mean-spirited flick was always considered a one-act but keeps getting deeper. If you want a real express joy, read the motion picture's Rotten Tomatoes reviews instead.

Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever (2002)

Look no further than this 2002 gem for proof that star power alone can't save a bad film. Starring Lucy Liu and Antonio Banderas, the picture is nigh ii government agents who are fighting over who can get their hands on some new diabolical weapon get-go.

Photograph Courtesy: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic, Inc/ Getty Images

An understandable plot, however, seems to be the terminal matter on the filmmakers' minds. The unabridged picture show is more than like 1 big string of explosions, bullets and plotlines gone rogue (and wrong). With more than 100 bad reviews to its name, if it's not the worst film of all time, it's definitely pretty shut.

Kirk Cameron's Saving Christmas (2017)

As i critic summed this ane upwards, "Saving Christmas is basically 80 minutes of Cameron lambasting Christians for not being his equal when it comes to intolerance and close-mindedness." The film left both believers and nonbelievers alike wondering what had only happened to the incredibly confusing terminal 80 minutes of their lives.

Photo Courtesy: Kirk Cameron'southward Saving Christmas/ IMDb

The bizarre undertaking looks more similar something Cameron filmed on his phone after a few too many egg nogs and is more than or less him preaching a sermon he didn't bother to research. The whole thing comes across more like a vanity slice than an inspirational message.

Folks! (1992)

Tom Selleck, the role player who resembles a real-life Ken doll, made a major mistake when he took the lead function in the incredibly problematic Folks. In the film, Selleck'south Jon Aldrich tries to manage his work and personal life while his parents, specially his father who lives with dementia, continued to brand his life more and more problematic.

Photo Courtesy: 20th Century-Trick/Getty Images

Folks! was heavily panned for its negative portrayal of anyone over the age of fifty, but especially for the low-forehead sense of humor at the expense of someone living with dementia. You couldn't find any folks in the athenaeum who had a expert matter to say about this poorly-written moving-picture show.

A Low Down Muddy Shame (1994)

A movie with the likes of Keenen Ivory Wayans and Jada Pinkett Smith sounds like it would be a recipe for a practiced flick, right? Wrong. This action/comedy dud written, directed by and starring Wayans was panned for its terrible plot lines and story structure.

Photo Courtesy: A Low Down Muddied Shame/ IMDb

Legendary picture show critic had some especially cut words for the LAPD-focused moving-picture show: "Here is a movie almost guns. Take away the guns, and the picture show would be nearly nada much. The plot, the dialogue and all simply 1 of the characters are so shallow that, without murder for a punch line, they'd deflate." What a shame.

Precious Cargo (2016)

Sigh. Poor Bruce Willis. This movie was so bad it makes other bad movies look good. Willis played the role of Eddie Filosa, who convinces a law-breaking boss and his gang to steal $30 one thousand thousand in diamonds from some other crime gang in exchange for a woman.

Photo Courtesy: Emmett/Furla/Oasis Films/IMDb

Some other flick whose plot points and story structure are just filled with guns and high-speed chases. The cheap dialog and intentionally funny moments turned into a piece of painful, gut-wrenching cinema. It should honestly be retitled "Total Garbage".

Transylmania (2009)

A group of sexy higher co-eds political party abroad in a vampire-filled Romania. What could possibly go wrong? When the pb graphic symbol Rusty arranges the Eurotrip so he could come across his Internet girlfriend Draguta, you realize how much really will get wrong in this far-from-campy movie.

Photo Courtesy: Full Circle/IMDb

The picture is filled with a bunch of tired gags, monsters that aren't scary and too many characters to develop an affinity towards any of them. For a movie from the National Lampoon franchise, this screwball comedy actually fails to deliver whatsoever "mania" outside of pure nausea.

London Fields (2018)

The clairvoyant Nicola Six, played past Amber Heard, learns that she will die at the hands of a man in her life. Naturally, she begins to date three men to discover which one will be her killer. That makes total sense, correct? Zippo disruptive to contemplate there.

Photo Courtesy: London Fields/IMDb

The pic grossed $168,575 on its opening weekend, with a per-screen average of $261. The Contained's critic Kaleem Aftab claimed, "Well-nigh scenes lack stride, are performed badly and are accompanied by a running commentary of action we can see for ourselves."

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