Nicolas Cage is by far one of my favorite actors, because even
in a bad movie like this one, he gives everything he's got.
It's like Bad Santa 2, but instead of talented actors
starring in a bad movie, it's uninspired talent at their laziest.
Unless you're a diehard McConaughey fan and want to see him give a good
performance in a bad movie, my suggestion is to... not watch their story.
Scandalous Justin was scrumming
around in bad movies and Black Eyed Peas (yeesh, what's with the Black Eyed Peas affiliation, JT?)
And last, Rosicky's «foul» that directly led to the final goal was nothing more than a tap, and Barton dropped like he'd been hit in the back of the head with a cricket bat swung by Vinnie
Jones in a bad movie — it wasn't even good acting.
Hawkins is always good and I'm looking forward to her being allowed to do something other than be
wonderful in bad movies.
Living through 2017, as we all kept saying and got sick of hearing ourselves saying but couldn't stop saying because it was so true, was like being
trapped in a bad movie.
If you're a fan of Selma Blair, or even Max Beesley, perhaps you might like seeing them deliver good
work in a bad movie enough to watch it at least once, but it's quite a sacrifice you're making if you do.
I could go on about the
year in bad movies (I Love You, Daddy and Wonder Wheel, for example, which exist on their own separate inferno level of 2017 metabadness).
WHY: Robert De Niro may be choosing better scripts these days, but he's not immune to
appearing in bad movies, as evidenced in this direct - to - video thriller that plays like a mix between «Speed» and «John Q.» Director Scott Mann and writer Stephen Cyrus Sepher have created an incredibly predictable crime flick that uses just about every cliché in the book, from the desperate father trying to save his child, to the villain with a crisis of conscience.
Even more surprising is seeing a buffonish, exaggerated cartoon
character in the worst movie ever associated with Tarantino's name at the top.
Nicolas Cage probably doesn't seek out to make an awful film, though if he is
in a bad movie then why not make it something to remember.
He likes Jacques Tati, Loves of a Blonde, and Amarcord among others FlavorWire looks back at Madonna & Sean's Shanghai
Surprise in its Bad Movie Night column Telerama (in French) Alain Guirardie talks about his filmography - he thinks he can do better than Stranger by the Lake!
Maybe there's all kind
bad in bad movies: but like how when you own a red car it seems like the road is dominated by red cars, it's an illusion that all that is wrong and wicked and inoffensive in the larger culture seems to be mirrored in movies that have gone wrong, too.
He's taking a lot of money to
star in bad movies, and when actors star in badly written and plotted films; they're acting reflects that.
Stallone has a few unexpectedly strong dramatic scenes opposite Kim Basinger as the woman who got between Razor and the Kid, showing the genuine soulfulness that has often made Stallone a compelling performer
even in his worst movies.
However, this just in: Redmayne was recently caught giving a Shatner-esque performance
in a bad movie, «Jupiter Ascending.»
It is never spelled out that the magazine's critics will subsequently give the movie in question a favorable review, but any reasonable publicist would assume that a magazine would not want to feature someone who was
in a bad movie.
But even
in her worst movies, Kidman is never the problem; her performances rise above whatever dreck they're in, as if her supreme self - possession as a performer inoculated her against the toxic material she was working with.
She brings
it in bad movies (The Iron Lady) and brings it in great movies (Adaptation)-- so there isn't likely going to be anything disappointing about Streep in this film.
Teller, who was previously charming even
in his worst movies, can't manage to wring even a few smiles out of his performance as Reed.
Characters spew exposition like
in a bad movie.
Floppy disks (now used only for drink coasters and
in bad movies) 13.