Taste Of Cinema - 20 Worst Movies Ever Made 2015

From Cringe to Catastrophe: The 20 Worst Movies of 2015 While 2015 delivered cinematic triumphs like Mad Max: Fury Road and Inside Out , it also birthed a collection of "unwatchable" films that critics and audiences still recall with a shudder. According to Taste of Cinema , these 20 films represented the absolute bottom of the barrel for the year. 1. The Ridiculous 6

Similarly, (2017) was just over the horizon, but in 2015, critics pointed to Norm of the North (2016) as the coming apocalypse. A polar bear who raps? In 2015, we didn't know how good we had it.

These films, among others, are often cited as being among the worst ever made due to their poor production values, incoherent storylines, and amateurish performances. taste of cinema 20 worst movies ever made 2015

In the grand cathedral of cinema, we often celebrate the transcendent masterpieces—the Citizen Kane s, the Vertigo s, the Kurosawa s. But every light casts a shadow. For every Godfather , there is a Garbage Pail Kids Movie . For every Shawshank Redemption , a Birdemic . By 2015, the internet had democratized failure, allowing us to quantify and canonize incompetence with the same fervor we reserve for genius. Taste of Cinema’s infamous lists of the “20 Worst Movies Ever Made” (circa 2015) do not merely document bad films; they map the topography of human error, ego, and occasionally, glorious delusion.

These twenty films are not simply boring. Boredom is the sin of the forgettable. No, these films achieve a kind of negative transcendence. They are the Plan 9 from Outer Space s of the digital age—movies that break not just rules, but the very will to watch. From Cringe to Catastrophe: The 20 Worst Movies

Ultimately, the “20 Worst Movies Ever Made” are a distorted mirror. They reflect what happens when passion exceeds talent, when money overrules taste, and when no one on set has the courage to say, “Stop. This polar bear should not rap.”

Interestingly, the worst movies often share one trait: a profound disconnect between the filmmaker’s ambition and their ability. Consider (2000), a perennial top-five contender. Based on L. Ron Hubbard’s novel and starring John Travolta in dreadlocks, this film is a sensory assault of Dutch angles and psychotic over-acting. It costs $73 million but looks like a high school play filmed on a malfunctioning drone. By 2015, it was the benchmark for fiscal irresponsibility. The Ridiculous 6 Similarly, (2017) was just over

Adam Sandler’s Netflix debut, , takes the top spot for its "imbecilic humor" and offensive caricatures. Despite its star-studded cast, it earned a rare 0% on Rotten Tomatoes. 2. Mortdecai