was the really bad film about Kellog and the Battle Creek sanitarium whose title escapes me at the moment.
The Road to Wellville? Matthew Broderick plus the hilarity of enemas?
'The Cautionary Tale of Numero Cinco'
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was the really bad film about Kellog and the Battle Creek sanitarium whose title escapes me at the moment.
The Road to Wellville? Matthew Broderick plus the hilarity of enemas?
The Road to Wellness? x-post with misremembered title, woo!
Yes! The Road to Wellville. The only character that I really liked in that film was Camryn Mannheim, playing the woman who really loves to ride her bicycle.
The book is really, well, clever-funny. They played the movie too broadly.
Last Tango in ParisI don't regret much in this life, but wasting time on that steaming pile of inexcusably overhyped rubbish? Yeah. That's a regret.
I have seen all the flops except for Land of the Lost. Not sure what that says about me.
I've had many bad movie viewing experiences but the very worst was at Union Station when the ex-friend I was with screamed at, and then actually stood up and struck a mother struggling down the aisle with a baby carriage. Yes, I said 'struck' and 'ex'.
My least favorite moviegoing experience was probably The Blair Witch Project. I've certainly seen worse movies (see above, re: Battlefield Earth), but Blair Witch was the only one that made me literally sick to my stomach. I didn't walk out, but I had to take more than a few bathroom breaks.
I think that list left out some obvious flops, like Glitter. And Basic Instinct 2. And this is an... odd interpretation:
[The Spirit] was killed by comic fans, who wanted Miller to go back to comics
I've seen Grindhouse (several times), but didn't catch it when it was in theaters.
Worst movie experience would probably be Jurassic Park, because I was ill and had to go curl up on a sofa in the bathroom/lounge for large portion of it. I saw it later and it was kind of interesting to go "Ah, that must have been what happened when I heard the whole theater gasp. Okay." But it worked out, since now I can say that the last Spielberg movie I saw made me sick.
Do comic fans have enough power to kill a movie?
Did Glitter come out in the right time period?
It seems like there has always been Glitter to make fun of, but IMDB says it came out in 2001.
Worst movie-going experience was seeing The Rainmaker while sitting in the movie with both little kids up too late AND Snoring Drunk Guy. But I did actually like the movie.