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Six SFF Movies That Are So Bad They’re Good

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Six SFF Movies That Are So Bad They’re Good

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Six SFF Movies That Are So Bad They’re Good

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Published on September 21, 2022

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Movies that are known for being so bad, they’re good form a loose genre, but it is one that can be hard to define. Sometimes these films are classed as guilty pleasures or cult classics, but straight-up terrible movies can occupy the former category, while genuinely great movies can occupy the latter. Often they are B-movies, but sometimes big budget films slip in too—I’m looking at you Moonfall (2022). Perhaps the most well-known examples of this type of film are Tommy Wiseau’s The Room (2003) and Ed Wood’s Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957).

Although there isn’t a snappy label to perfectly capture this category of movie, there are some clear features shared by the films that qualify. Their bad elements—things like bizarre acting, poor special effects, a clunky script, and weird plot points—are so strange and offbeat that they become funny. They can’t be merely mediocre in their badness, and purposefully bad, intentionally cheesy films (like the Sharknado series) are a different beast entirely. To be worthy of being called a good-bad movie, a film needs to have attempted to be good, but the end result has to be so weird or campy or hopelessly full of faults that it becomes enjoyably watchable (particularly with company).

Still, as this is such a vaguely defined genre, there will often be split opinions on whether a particular film is either just plain bad or actually good. So, here are my own personal top SFF movies that are so bad they’re good, but feel free to sound off in the comments if you disagree!

 

Wishmaster (1997)

There are some truly iconic characters in the great pantheon of horror movie villains; think Michael Myers, Jason Voorhees, and Freddy Krueger. I’m here to tell you that the Djinn/Nathaniel Demerest from Wishmaster deserves a spot on that list.

Trapped within a gemstone for hundreds of years, the Djinn is accidentally awakened and prepares to unleash his twisted wish-granting power upon the ’90s. If he manages to grant three wishes to the person who disturbed his slumber, a jewel appraiser called Alex, then his fellow djinn will be set loose upon Earth. Of course, as this is a Wes Craven-produced horror movie, he doesn’t helpfully serve up wishes like Robin Williams’ delightful Genie. Sometimes the Djinn’s horrible distortions of wishes are realized via awful CGI—which is hilarious in its own right—and sometimes they come to life via genuinely skillful and creepy practical effects.

Wishmaster is littered with cameos from horror legends, but despite featuring people such as Robert Englund (Freddy), Kane Hodder (Jason), and Tony Todd (the original Candyman), it is Andrew Divoff’s performance as the Djinn which steals the show. You may find yourself imitating his deep voice and oddly over-pronounced words for weeks after the credits have rolled. Although Wishmaster never found favor with critics or a wide audience, it is an absolute gem (pun intended) of fantasy-horror cheesiness.

 

Mortal Kombat (1995)

Movies based on video games are notorious for being terrible, and while the 1995 version of Mortal Kombat is one of the better adaptations, it certainly isn’t a masterpiece. But many of the things that keep Mortal Kombat from being great actually make it all the more fun to watch. The only true disappointment is the fact that the filmmakers wanted a PG-13 rating, so they axed the graphic violence and iconic brutal finishing moves that the game is known for.

Three fighters are chosen to defend Earth in the Mortal Kombat tournament; if they fail, Earth will be invaded by evil forces from the Outworld realm. Although Mortal Kombat doesn’t deliver blood-soaked carnage, a large portion of the runtime is thankfully dedicated to the fighting. The actors also do a great job of embodying their video game counterparts, particularly Robin Shou as Liu Kang. And it’s impossible to not get hyped up when the epic techno theme song starts playing and everyone gets to bellow along with the words “Mortal Kombat!”

But there are a few specific things that push Mortal Kombat into so-bad-it’s-good territory: The martial arts sparring is punctuated with comically unnecessary flips and poses, Johnny Cage is constantly spitting out cringe-inducing one-liners, and the special effects are sometimes laughably bad. Reptile’s lizard form and Scorpion’s kunai (his sentient, serpent-like harpoon weapon) are particular highlights. It’s easy to see why these elements contributed to the film’s mixed reception when it was released, but their considerable goofiness only adds to its charm now.

The 1997 sequel Annihilation, which picks up right where the original movie ends, is far closer to being just a conventional bad movie, but it does still have some fun moments. The final fight scene in particular, which you can just watch on YouTube, features such astonishingly awful CGI that it feels like a fever dream.

 

Troll 2 (1990)

You might think that a movie called Troll 2 would be a sequel to Troll (1986) and would feature trolls, but you’d be wrong. Troll 2 is entirely unconnected to Troll and is actually about goblins! Specifically, it’s about vegetarian goblins that have to transform humans into plants before they can eat them. All of this indicates that Troll 2 is not going to be a regular, run-of-the-mill movie, but the level of weird that it eventually reaches is truly shocking.

It quickly becomes apparent that almost no one cast in the movie had prior acting experience. To make matters worse—or better, depending on your point of view—the script is absurd. Written and directed by Italian husband and wife Claudio Fragasso and Rossella Drudi, the language barrier led to a script which belongs in the far reaches of the uncanny valley. The plot itself also defies belief. Take, for instance, the scene where a woman seduces a teenager with a cob of corn and ends with an explosion of popcorn.

Watching Troll 2 is both a baffling and hilarious experience. I also highly recommend a viewing of Best Worst Movie (2009), a documentary about Troll 2 which is directed by its child star, Michael Stephenson. It looks back at the making of the film and explores why it has become so beloved.

 

Jason X (2001)

The Friday the 13th franchise went off the rails long before Jason X hit theaters, but the concept of Jason in space effortlessly elevates things to another level of ridiculous. Launching a franchise into space is often seen as a desperate Hail Mary, but with Freddy vs. Jason (2003) on the horizon, the filmmakers realized that a futuristic space setting was the perfect way to make a Jason movie without messing up the current timeline.

Jason X is incredibly self-aware, beginning in a research facility where scientists have been trying to kill Jason/figure out how he is always able to regenerate. After yet another murder spree, Jason is cryogenically frozen and left untouched for 455 years, during which time the Earth becomes uninhabitable and humanity moves to a planet with the highly unoriginal name of Earth II. In 2455, a group researching and exploring Old Earth stumble upon Jason and bring him aboard their ship, believing him to be dead (what fools!).

The rest of the movie follows Jason as he hacks his way around the spaceship, the slick futuristic look of which is horrendously tacky, murdering people with his shiny new machete. He gets a few creative kills in too, like freezing someone’s head in liquid nitrogen and then shattering it against a table. If you can stand the painful attempts at comedy and insufferable characters then you’ll be rewarded with Uber Jason: a nanobot-created cyborg version of Jason which teeters right on the line between cool and silly.

Is Jason X kind of a disaster? Undoubtedly. But is it fun if viewed through the right lens? Also yes.

 

Hawk the Slayer (1980)

Hawk the Slayer is a campy, low-budget sword-and-sorcery flick that has more heart than you’d expect. It tells a classic tale of good vs. evil: the heroic Hawk, possessor of the magical Mind Sword, gathers a team to battle his evil brother Voltan, who is delightfully overacted by Jack Palance and definitely visually inspired by Darth Vader. Much like J.R R. Tolkien’s fellowship, Hawk’s crew features an eccentric cast of characters, with my personal favorite being the bow-wielding elf called Crow who speaks in the emotionless monotone of a Vulcan.

The workarounds the film employs in its attempts to bring magic to life on such a small budget are as glorious as they are ridiculous. Glowing bouncy balls are used as firebolts and silly string is used as immobilizing rope. Then there’s the film’s score, which takes the expected medieval sound and adds synth pop to the mix. There’s even a dash of Jeff Wayne’s The War of the Worlds in there. The combination honestly works better than it has any right to.

For many years director Terry Marcel attempted to make a sequel happen but it never came together. Then at the beginning of 2022, comic book writer Garth Ennis (known for Preacher and The Boys) finally brought the sequel to life on the page rather than the screen. Illustrated by Henry Flint, the comic feels like an affectionate continuation of the story rather than a piss-take.

 

Tremors 2: Aftershocks (1996)

The original Tremors (1990) is a fantastic monster movie, with a lovable cast of characters and giant subterranean worms, known as graboids, created with stellar practical effects. The many sequels may be objectively worse than the original, but they all have one very important thing in common: Michael Gross.

Gross plays Burt Gummer, a wacky survivalist prepper whose many weapons and graboid-killing skills play a vital role in the franchise. Gross’s larger-than-life performance of Burt is so much fun to watch. Tremors 2 sees him team up with Earl (Fred Ward also reprises his role) to kill graboids at a Mexican oil refinery. As well as giving Burt a bigger role, the second film also begins to explore the life cycle of the graboids in order to introduce new and highly entertaining threats.

Tremors 2 offers up shriekers—the second stage of the graboid life cycle—bipedal creatures that can attack above the surface. Tremors 3: Back to Perfection (2001) takes the silliness of the shriekers and ramps it up by introducing us to the third-stage graboids known as ass blasters, which can launch themselves into the air. Tremors 4: The Legend Begins (2004) is set in 1889 but still manages to star Gross, this time as Burt’s great-grandfather, Hiram Gummer. The first three sequels are worth a shot for anyone who loves a so-bad-it’s-good movie, but the last three lose some of the magic (so they should probably only be approached by people who are seriously invested in Burt).

***

 

That’s my list! Go ahead and drop your own recommendations of movies that are so bad they’re good in the comments below.

Lorna Wallace has a PhD in English Literature and is a lover of all things science fiction and horror. She lives in Scotland with her rescue greyhound, Misty.

About the Author

Lorna Wallace

Author

Lorna Wallace has a PhD in English Literature, but left the world of academia to become a freelance writer. Along with writing about all things sci-fi and horror for Reactor, she has written for Mental Floss, Fodor’s, Contingent Magazine, and Listverse. She lives in Scotland with her rescue greyhound, Misty.
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2 years ago

Troll 2 is also infamous for That Scene, where Joshua prevents his family from eating the food that will turn them into plants by urinating on it. How I wish I making that up.

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Hawthorn Wright
2 years ago

No Warriors of the Wasteland? This makes me sad.

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Bonnie McDaniel
2 years ago

The movie I remember being good-awful was Yor: The Hunter From the Future. 

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2 years ago

I have no idea what you’re talking about here.  Sure, Trolls 2 was likely made by stoned high-schoolers; but you also list 4 classics of film history.

xenobathite
2 years ago

No mention of Super Mario Bros? For shame!

Doomsday is another glorious one; postapocalypse Max Max-oid Scotland! With a cannibal orgy involving kilted Scotsmen doing the can-can!

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2 years ago

Just Jason X? One could say the whole Friday the 13th franchise was born off the rails.

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2 years ago

Hudson Hawk is the best terrible movie in history. It makes no sense and is awesome at the same time.

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2 years ago

What’s not to understand about “two crooks who synchronize using their keen grasp of show tunes save the world’s economy from Evil Nick and Nora Charles?”

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Fazal Majid
2 years ago

You forgot the campus SF film of all time, John Boorman’s Zardoz, featuring Sean Connery in a g-string.

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Theresa
2 years ago

I’m just sad Waterworld isn’t on this list. Legit the first movie I think when “so bad it’s good” is mentioned.

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Jennifer
2 years ago

I have to put in a vote for Space Milkshake, which is so bad it’s awesome. (Fun cast all around, and George Takei as a shapeshifting rubber ducky? Yes, please!)

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Brian Liebenow
2 years ago

Army of Darkness!!

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RC
2 years ago

That trailer for Hawk the Slayer is amazingly bad. Did MST 3k ever do that one?

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Sandy
2 years ago

Army of Darkness and The Hidden (Kyle McLachlan and Michael Nouri). As a special treat, listen to the director’s commentary on The Hidden. He is not afraid to dish behind-the-scenes dirt.

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2 years ago

My favorite and one which walks the good-or-bad tightrope is “Big Trouble in Little China.” One is never really sure whether one is supposed to take the film seriously or it’s just a cheese-fest. I love it because of how Kurt Russell just John-Waynes his way through the entire film without batting an eyelash, and his character never makes any move toward adapting anything, remaining 100 percent roughshod ‘Murrican from beginning to end. This does not make the character likable, it just makes him the stable point in a whirlwind plot. Which, I’m guessing, was part of the plan. :-) Lots of wu xia and SFX (dated) spice it up, and it all makes me laff like a little kid.

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Sol Siegel
2 years ago

THE KEEP!!!! You haven’t lived until you’ve seen the Werhmacht advancing through the Carpathians in soft-focus slo-mo with Tangerine Dream on the soundtrack, and that’s just the opening credits. 

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Sally
2 years ago

Buckaroo Bonzai

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2 years ago

@15 Laker56 I won’t hear a WORD against “Big Trouble in Little China”. I LOVE that movie.

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Jasin Moridin
2 years ago

@13 – Kinda.  There is, in fact, a Rifftrax of it, and Rifftrax was born from MST3K and features many of the same people.

My friends and I also riffed Hawk the Slayer live at a convention, using a script we’d finished the first draft of literally a week before the actual Rifftrax came out.  It was interesting that both we and they went to exactly the same places for a few of the riffs.

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karl
2 years ago

I can hardly believe such a list can be constructed without mention of Dark Star, an early (1974) John Carpenter film. Come on, an existentialism-philosophying, AI-aware bomb.

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0069945/

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2 years ago

I think the Tremors movies stand alone, but really should be viewed as a whole. All seven are delightfully campy, and when combined with the 2003 series, create an arc that is unrivaled in SF (except maybe by the Planet of the Apes movies and series). Burt Gummer may be an unlikely hero, but his resilience and MacGyver-like creativity prove him to be more than a one-note joke. I contend he’s an extraordinary pop culture legend, right up there with Snake Plisskin and Mad Max.

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Jeff
2 years ago

The Rocky Horror Picture Show is one of my favorites. 

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2 years ago

@20: Dark Star is not bad. 

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Aonghus Fallon
2 years ago

Space Truckers, anybody? It was made right here in Ireland!

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Peter
2 years ago

I’d like to take a moment to recognise In The Name Of The King, another computer game adaptation. It’s a mediaeval style fantasy consisting of various LotR tropes with the serial numbers filed off, but what makes it great is the cast. Jason Statham is the lead, playing a farmer, called Farmer – it’s his standard character of unkillable kung-fu badass, despite that making no sense for a simple farmer. Burt Reynolds is comedically miscast as the king, Ron Perlman has realised early on that this is a terrible film and decided he’s putting in 1% effort at maximum, John Rhys-Davies has not realised that this is a terrible film and is doing his best to force gravitas into execrable dialogue and bizarre plot (a highlight being him describing his daughter sleeping with the evil wizard with an overblown, “You’ve let him tap into our bloodline!!!”).

The highlight is Ray Liotta playing the evil wizard – he has also realised he’s in a terrible film, but has gone entirely the other direction and decided to have as much fun as he can and energetically chew every single bit of scenery that he can possibly get his teeth around.

Watch it with friends and alcohol. It is a masterpiece.

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2 years ago

Any TREMORS movie without Reba McEntire is by definition an inferior movie.

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2 years ago

Has everyone forgotten “Ice Pirates”?

I would also mention “Dark Star” except I was beaten to it.  

Probably showing my age with those two.

“Big Trouble in Little China” arguably does not belong on this list, because it is just wonderful.   It’s not so bad it’s good; it is great on its own merits.   I would put “Buckaroo Bonzai” in this category with BTiLC.

“Blood and Donuts”    All the actors seemed to put their hearts into this terrible film.  And so, the film has a heart that captures the viewer’s.

 

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2 years ago

@27: I, for one, have not forgotten Ice Pirates.  But I’m not sure I would put it in this category.  It may, in fact, only be bad enough to be not particularly good.

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Anna
2 years ago

Check out Virtual Weapon. There’s a clip on youtube called “VIRTUAL WEAPON (1997, clip) Terence Hill” that’s quite . . . something.

xenobathite
2 years ago

And how could I forget Ken Russell’s incredibly loopy Lair of the White Worm, featuring Roman legionaries vs nuns, folk rock interludes, extremely unsubtle biro use and Hugh Grant saving the day with a mongoose he keeps in his sporran.

Get the version with Ken’s commentary if you possibly can; it adds whole new levels of joy to the WTF.

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2 years ago

I gotta say, during the Crystal Lake sim in Jason X, I genuinely LOLd.  That was good stuff.

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Ben
2 years ago

Hi. I like your list. But one problem…what the heck does SFF stand for??? I’ve looked on this site, I’ve Googled it, and I have no idea what it means. It’s killing me. 

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2 years ago

@32: SFF = Science Fiction and Fantasy.  Pretty common abbreviation on this site, and just in general

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KJ
2 years ago

The Beastmaster has to be on the list.  It filled 42% of Superstation WTBS programming before it was TBS.

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Karen
2 years ago

, it stands for “Science Fiction & Fantasy.”

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2 years ago

@32, @33, @36. Depending on which you like the most, it is sometimes abbreviated as FSF, or F&SF

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Beanmills
2 years ago

I’m going to throw Dungeons & Dragons (2000) in as my so-bad-its-good vote. Jeremy Irons as evil Wizard Senator trying to take over the world with evil genius plot.. just *chef’s kiss*. So much awesome (awful?) late 90s CGI- my personal fave is the Beholder. Whether you agree or not, just go watch it! :)

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Jenny Islander
2 years ago

@15: I’ve read that the big plot twist is that Russell’s character is the comic relief sidekick in a kung fu fantasy who <i>thinks</i> he’s the star in a John Wayne vehicle.

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2 years ago

@27: I thought I was the only person who saw Blood and Donuts.

@34: TBS stands for “The Beastmaster Station”.

@36/37: I think if you use F&SF, everyone will think you mean the magazine. 

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Steve
2 years ago

It’s nice to see a lot of people’s perspective for the SSF.

Just top of my head, my pick would be 

The Last Chase, Cherry 2000, the Battle Star Beyond, Moon 45, Screamers, The Dark, I come in peace.😎

 

 

 

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Vault
2 years ago

Army of Darkness AND Big Trouble in Little China? You people in the comments have lost your damn minds.

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2 years ago

 Dungeons and Dragons would be immensely improved with the replacement of either Marlon Wayan’s character or dialogue. But, yes for years I owned and watched it to the chagrin of my wife.

The Last Starfighter is another one in that mold. Cutting edge GCI that wouldn’t be beat for a literal decade, and a brother who looks at Playboys. Awesome alien costumes and Robert Preston himself, but the fake droid make-out at the lake. Alternate cheer and cringe.

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James Luther
2 years ago

I have to chime in with Russ Meyers’ Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970). Also The Devil’s Men, starring Donald Pleasence and Peter Cushing (1976).

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2 years ago

No love for the Warcraft movie? 

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Konstantin
2 years ago

Check up Beowulf with Kevin Kosner. It is a disaster – and first time we’ve watched as a party, we did it three times in a row, carrying VHS from one party place to another.

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Chaironea
2 years ago

 The Princess Bride. R.O.U.S. It is so iconic that is quoted in a museum on sailor’s yarn and mostly recognized by visitors (mostly geeks like me).

Tremors was virtually slaughtered here in Germany by its title alone: “In the Land of the Rocket Worms” would be the translation. Who is supposed to watch that?

Oh, and definitely worth an honorable mention is Popeye. The only film I ever left before the end.

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Chaucer59
2 years ago

Wimps. Two movies I thought for sure I’d see on this list:

(1) the original “Conan the Barbarian” with Schwarzenegger is a movie so bad you have to see it stoned to fully appreciate the scenery-chewing, silly fight choreography, and campy reasoning delivered as straightforward philosophy. That and the green soup full of rubber body parts—my gods, why would anyone want to watch this clear-headed?

(2) that great American classic of porn SF, “Flesh Gordon,” monument to offense and poor taste sprinkled with comedy gems. It was also nominated for a Hugo Award the same year as “Zardoz” and “Young Frankenstein.” “Zardoz” is (deservedly) mentioned more than once above in the comments. “Young Frankenstein” (the 1975 Hugo winner) was once a favorite of mine, but thanks to a huge, plot-centric rape joke—well, let’s just say the humor hasn’t aged well.

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2 years ago

@48 Chaucer59 Well, I think you have missed the boat on “Conan the Barbarian”, epic in visuals and sound. Its sequel, “Conan the Destroyer”, on the other hand, is every bit as awful as you describe….

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2 years ago

@49 That’s what happens when you water down the adult content to appeal to the kiddies.  Hey, I see you hiding over there “Ghostbusters 2!”

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Elle
2 years ago

Zardoz?