RE: The Last Movie You Watched
June 10, 2019 at 1:37 pm
(This post was last modified: June 10, 2019 at 1:38 pm by Rev. Rye.)
Now that I've done my third genre cycle through the Deep Hurting Project, I figure it's time to update the Deep Hurting Awards.
Awards that haven't changed:
Awards that haven't changed:
- Most Brain-Breaking:Highlander 2. This film may have the most plot holes of any film I've seen with the possible exception of Battlefield Earth, which is ineligible for the award to give others a fighting chance.
- Most Reprehensible: Vaxxed. Nuff Said.
- Best Worst Movie: Guardians. Probably the first film I've watched for the project that I'd seriously consider buying if I found a copy at Half-Price Books. And it's so absurd in how badly it apes the current crop of Superhero movies. The Bratz film is ineligible for this award to give others a fighting chance.
- The The Eye Creatures Award for Just Not Caring (formerly Most Stunningly Incompetent): Stranded. It's an incredibly stupid ripoff of Alien played dead serious and filmed on a budget so low that a robotic booklight plays the part of a high-tech space communicator. Thank Jah Christian Slater found Mr. Robot.
- The Richie Cusack Award for Epic Fails: Yep, the scene from A History of Violence where William Hurt asks "How do you fuck that up?" is now a fixture of the Deep Hurting Project. And now, I've decided to devote his awards to simple fucking things that the filmmakers fuck up spectacularly. Do I give it to Hilary's America for setting out to make a movie claiming Democrats are the real racists and fail to do justice to targets who would seem like shooting fish in a barrel? Or The Apparition for somehow having more plot in the fucking trailer than the actual film? Nope, I'm giving it to The Emoji Movie. Why? Because they fuck up the most basic aspects of the plot: Gene has the unusual problem of having multiple emotions which forms the basic thrust of the film, except that other emojis actually show multiple emotions, and not just Steven Wright. They go for a "be yourself" moral, but fuck it up because when Gene tries to be himself, it risks THE ENTIRE PHONEWORLD BEING DESTROYED. And it somehow saves the day because the girl he's into is impressed by a weird emoji. They go for a feminist moral claiming that there was an era where female emojis could only be princesses and brides, except that Smiler (a female) was not only the first emoji, but was their leader from time immemorial.
- Most Frustrating experience as a viewer: As bad as Hilary's America was, it at least had a distinctive style that gave some laughs, particularly with the low-budget docudrama sections. The follow-up, Death of a Nation, however, is even worse, basically treading the same ground, replacing the so-bad-it's-good re-enactments with barely competent ones. At one point, he even stops the film about 80 minutes in so his wife could cover a Celtic Woman song. He's basically taking the few sections with any sort of So Bad It's Good appeal and making them just bad.
- Worst Film I've Ever Seen: I wanted so bad to put The Babe Ruth Story in this category. But somehow, less than a week after, I saw One Missed Call and found it was even worse. I loved poking fun at the former, but the latter, it was just so dull that I found myself struggling to make jokes, even as the actor who played Leland Palmer on Twin Peaks got reacquanted with demonic possession. It was so bad that the closest thing the film had to any redeeming quality was Margaret Cho deciding to give her character a Southern Accent for about one line in five. Because her just barely deciding to put some effort into her minor character was far more than literally anyone else was putting into the film.
- Megatron Award for Bad Comedy: Yep, it's official, Doogal is worse than Bio-Dome in this regard. Taking the Shrek formula, fucking literally everything up so there's no charm in it, even the celebrity voice actors, and doing so with a film that already had a decent English dub. The Magic Roundabout cut is on YouTube, and while I haven't seen the whole thing, from what I've seen, it's a C-movie at best. But given the F-- Doogal dub, it's practically a masterpiece.
- Most Generic piece of shit: The Legend of Hercules. It seems to exist solely to rip off any and all familiar movies that take place in Antiquity (Gladiator and 300 mostly) and just decided that everything was all part of the legend of Hercules. Even if Gladiatorial arenae were a Roman phoenomena and not Greek, and even if they somehow got a Mesopotamian giant in there by mistake.
- Most Damn Faint Praise: Catwoman. It's really not a good movie, and may be one of the worst superhero movies ever made. But it's still a lot more tolerable than The Babe Ruth Story and One Missed Call. This could be because they devoted as much as possible to catering to the male gaze while still keeping a PG-13 rating, but at least Halle Berry puts her all into this piece of shit.
- The Raw Deal award for films that really deserved better: The Master of Disguise. I think we can all agree that this movie is utter crap, made even worse by catering to the narrow demographic young enough to find fart jokes, ass jokes, and a man named Pistachio Disguisey dressing up like a turtle and biting people's noses is funny, but old enough to recognise Bo Derek, Tony Montana, and Robert Shaw's character in Jaws and relate to Pistachio's ass fetish. But take the initial conceit: a spy comedy franchise built around a man with a preternatural ability to disguise himself, using that as a vehicle for the actor in question to showcase how versatile his performances can be. If Peter Sellers was still alive when this idea was going around, this would have been fucking perfect. Hell, if you've seen Holy Motors, the stuff Denis Levant does throughout the movie fits much the same MO (except without the espionage), and that movie is much better. Imagine what such a thing would have been if it wasn't picked up by a studio who pretty much exists as a welfare organisation for former SNL cast members who couldn't get roles in other studios. And you could even retain the weird borderline-autistic personality Pistachio had (at least if you put more work into it), perhaps adding a Little Voice element into the mix that could help explain why he's so good at it, like his impersonations are a way of trying to blend in to the neurotypical world.
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.