More Movies That Suck
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Average rating3.3
More of the Pulitzer Prize–winning film critic’s most scathing reviews. A Horrible Experience of Unbearable Length collects more than 200 of his reviews from 2006 to 2012 in which he gave movies two stars or fewer. Known for his fair-minded and well-written film reviews, Roger is at his razor-sharp humorous best when skewering bad movies. Consider this opener for the one-star Your Highness: “Your Highness is a juvenile excrescence that feels like the work of 11-year-old boys in love with dungeons, dragons, warrior women, pot, boobs, and four-letter words. That this is the work of David Gordon Green beggars the imagination. One of its heroes wears the penis of a minotaur on a string around his neck. I hate it when that happens.” And finally, the inspiration for the title of this book, the one-star Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen: “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is a horrible experience of unbearable length, briefly punctuated by three or four amusing moments. One of these involves a doglike robot humping the leg of the heroine. If you want to save yourself the ticket price, go into the kitchen, cue up a male choir singing the music of hell, and get a kid to start banging pots and pans together. Then close your eyes and use your imagination.” Roger Ebert’s I Hated, Hated, Hated This Movie and Your Movie Sucks, which gathered some of his most scathing reviews, were bestsellers. This collection continues the tradition, reviewing not only movies that were at the bottom of the barrel, but also movies that he found underneath the barrel. Movie buffs and humor lovers alike will relish this treasury of movies so bad that you may just want to see them for a good laugh!
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3 released booksRoger Ebert's Movies that Suck is a 3-book series with 3 released primary works first released in 2000 with contributions by Roger Ebert.
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Who doesn't like a great review of a bad movie?
I know I love the experience of watching an expert working close inside with a stiletto as they heap well-deserved scorn and equal helpings of wit on their flailing subject.
Weirdly, this is not that kind of book.
There are few zingers here, but for the most part, this book reviews a lot of movies that have two-star ratings, which means that these movies are mediocre and banal, but they are trying. In fact, it may be a result of Ebert's skill as a writer, but I found myself noting movies that I thought I might want to watch. These won't be great movies, but they might make decent time-wasters.
Of course, there are a number of one-star and half-star reviews that earn Ebert's contempt, and he offers that contempt up with wit and humor. Concerning Nicholas Cage's “Drive Angry 3-D,” Ebert has this to say:
“A movie review should determine what a movie hoped to achieve and whether it succeeded. The ambition of Drive Angry 3-D is to make a grind house B movie so jaw-droppingly excessive that even Quentin Tarantino might send flowers. It succeeds. I can't say I enjoyed it. But I can appreciate it. It offends every standard of taste except bad. But it is well made.”
Here is Ebert's insights into “A Good Old Fashioned Orgy”:
“To take off your clothing and engage randomly in sex with nine or ten other people reveals an appalling lack of self-respect. Is that all sex means to you, rummaging about in strange genitals? Masturbation seems healthier. It is performed with someone you admire. If a sexual orgy is as exciting as the people here pretend, why do they need to spice it up with costumes from fraternity toga parties, and sex toys from the remainder bins of adult stores across from truck stops on lonely interstate highways?”
Concerning the interminable Twilight saga, Ebert observes:
“Yes, Edward (Robert Pattinson) is back in school, repeating the twelfth grade for the eighty-fourth time. Bella sees him in the school parking lot, walking toward her in slow-motion, wearing one of those Edwardian Beatles jackets with a velvet collar, pregnant with his beauty. How white his skin, how red his lips. The decay of middle age may transform him into the Joker.”
There is a lot of good stuff in this book, but, unfortunately, I found it to be a bit of a slog because there are a lot mediocre movies out there.
And that is sad.