So Bad It's Good/Film



""There is hardly a thing I can say in its favor, except that I was cheered by nearly every minute of it. I cannot argue for the script, the direction, the acting or even the mummy, but I can say that I was not bored and sometimes I was unreasonably pleased. There is a little immaturity stuck away in the crannies of even the most judicious of us, and we should treasure it.""

- Roger Ebert, in his review of The Mummy Trilogy

There are a lot of really bad movies out there. Some of them are watchable in their own twisted way. In fact, there are studios who make movies like this almost exclusively. Many of these have been saved through Ham and Cheese.

Ed Wood's films and Troll 2 are so extremely So Bad It's Good that they're beyond criticism. Seriously, critics can't say anything bad about them because the films just speak for themselves. They're so bad, they're works of art.

Of course this is a very subjective trope, but let's try not to argue, eh?

""Inspector Clay is dead... murdered! And somebody's responsible!""
 * One French website is entirely dedicated to "nanars", i.e. hilariously bad films. You can take a look.
 * Plan 9 from Outer Space and many of Ed Wood's other films.
 * "Visits? That would indicate visitors."

""Because of death. Because all you of Earth are idiots." "Now you just hold on, buster." "No, you hold on!""
 * "Y'see? Y'SEE? Your stupid minds! Stupid, stupid!"

""Well, let's go down and find out whose grave it is." "How?" "By going down and finding out!""
 * Then there is this sequence:

"We're the Tur-tles You can count on us!"
 * "A particle of sunlight is made of many atoms!"
 * "We are all interested in the future, for that is where you and I are going to spend the rest of our lives. And remember my friend, future events such as these will affect you in the future." And after all this talk about the future, the narrator continues, "And now, for the first time, we are bringing to you the full story of what happened on that fateful day..."
 * "Now you can arrange the total destruction of the entire universe served by our sun"
 * The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Coming Out of Our Shells Tour. Don't know what it is? It's the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles performing as a rock band. What makes it So Bad It's Good? This song:


 * Street Fighter is the epitome of this trope. While normally this movie would be another case of Video Game Movies Suck, it casts Raul Julia--who, dying of cancer, asked his children to choose his final film role--as M. Bison. Raul plays it as a crazy over the top villain with such memorable lines as "For you, the day Bison graced your village is the most important day of your life. But for me...it was Tuesday," and "A Bison dollar. It's worth five British pounds... For that is the exchange rate the Bank of England will set once I kidnap their Queen!" For God's sake, he has a chandelier made out of human bones and he wonders why people think he's a villain?
 * One of M. Bison's lines was a Screw Attack.com movie quote of the week, done by The Angry Video Game Nerd: "FOR I BEHELD SATAN AS HE FELL FROM HEAVEN LIKE LIGHTNING!"
 * There's also just a whiff of Stealth Parody about the script, especially with regard to Guile's gung-ho motivational speech.
 * "QUICK! CHANGE THE CHANNEL!"
 * Peter Bogdanovich's much reviled musical At Long Last Love, realized without lipsynch in an attempt to recreate the atmosphere of classic musicals like Top Hat. It was an enormous box-office bomb and gained scathing reviews, yet some have re-evaluated it, at least as an example of this trope. It can be really funny to watch (marvel at the "vocal" stylings of Burt Reynolds and Cybill Shepherd!).
 * The Hong Kong movie Future Cops also falls squarely on this trope. WTH? Casting Agency with Hong Kong pop singers, every character is a Captain Ersatz of Street Fighter characters, silly humors, messed up character alignments like the above movie and a lot of wacky nonsensical scenes just doesn't even begin with this movie that takes itself even less seriously than Street Fighter above. Certainly this movie lives on the further end of 'Bad' of So Bad It's Good compared to that movie above. However, some still consider it a good movie for some senseless laughs.
 * Birdemic may actually be almost as bad as Plan 9 from Outer Space. And it never stops with the hurting!
 * Showgirls. A bit like Ed Wood's films, The Nostalgia Chick proclaimed it to be so bad that it almost swung round to be an art film.
 * The Grindhouse movies, Planet Terror and Death Proof, were generally regarded as So Bad It's Good by critics. Death Proof was actually criticized a bit for not being stupid enough. The director Quentin Tarantino has a different opinion: he doesn't believe in so bad it's good.
 * The Rocky Horror Picture Show is a textbook deliberate case of this. The plot (such as it is) is very like Manos the Hands of Fate (probably unintentional, given "Manos"'s cliched plot and utter obscurity until Mystery Science Theater 3000 found it) with vast galloping amounts of homoerotica thrown in. The characters were, for the most part, based on those of the Bulgakov novel The Master and Margarita - itself a modern masterpiece, partly because all of its failed drama is deliberate.

Richard O'Brien intentionally made it this way, as a tribute to the campy sci-fi films of the 50s & 60s (as evidenced by the opening number Science Fiction, Double Feature) "Martian: The people of Earth do not realize that Santa Claus has been kidnapped by Martians. Tom Servo: You do realize what you just said?"
 * The Slumber Party Massacre, a hilariously cheesy slasher flick. It contains panty shots, nudity, gore, and more fake-outs than you can shake a stick at. Oh, and it was originally written by a feminist as a spoof of slasher flicks - but the directors filmed it straight. The result is unbelievably goofy.
 * The Van Helsing movie. Big Bad Dracula is over-acted; the only guy who gets any action is the sidekick; and there's a Frankensteinsicle. Plus, an automatic crossbow. Stephen Sommers' other writing tends towards this trope.
 * Danish monster movie Reptilicus boasts bad acting, horrible special effects (the monster is a giant hand-puppet who attacks with Silly String), and a laughably implausible plot. (A forest in the Arctic?). See jabootu.com for more details.
 * Road House has been described as "The best movie ever made in which a philosophical bouncer finds love and confronts his demons while working at a rowdy honkytonk outside Kansas City." That should tell you everything you need to know about it. Road House was one of a number of movies recommended by a self-help book called The Psychopath's Bible.
 * Most of the movies featured on Mystery Science Theater 3000 deserved this status as soon as they were made but gained new notoriety after being lampooned by Joel and the 'bots. Some examples:
 * Robot Monster: in which the costumes of the robots comprised a gorilla suit and a diving helmet. And they look exactly like what they're made of. It also is an Ontological Mystery whose creators don't quite get that it's an Ontological Mystery, leading to a killer Logic Bomb and a jarring use of Schrodinger's Butterfly in a film aimed at the Lowest Common Denominator of people who watched BMovies at drive-ins.
 * Pod People. If all of humanity could love as Trumpy does, then there would be world peace. And many many potatoes.
 * Space Mutiny. Gave us the trope name "Railing Kill", special effects lifted wholesale from the original Battlestar Galactica Classic, and a host of goofy nicknames for protagonist David Ryder ("We put our faith in Blast Hardcheese!")
 * Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders, which is too scary to be a kids' movie, too childish to be a horror movie, and too stupid to be a children's horror movie.
 * Catalina Caper, a movie featuring a 3-minute animated opening credits sequence about a water-breathing Frenchman, his relationship with a mermaid, and a shark's attempts to part them. Unfortunately, this had nothing to do with the plot of the movie. It also has an extended Little Richard cameo.
 * "Puma Man! He flies like a moron!"
 * "Watch out for snakes!" Eegah!, a laughably bad caveman movie starring a James Bond villain and some whiny kid who can't even remember his girlfriend's name.
 * The Phantom Planet. Leonard Maltin called it a "fascinatingly terrible movie." With the stupid science, the bad special effects, and the absolutely terrible acting, it would be a hoot even without the bots. "Good thing there's so much gravity in space." That the main protagonist looks enough like dang ol' Boomhauer to be disturbing is the icing on the cake.
 * The Chicken-men of Krankor, from Prince of Space, may not be very threatening or three-dimensional villains, but they do serve as excellent comic relief throughout most of the movie. As for the Phantom of Krankor, he is every bit as silly as his henchmen, but he manages to drive even that off for a while because of his (twisted and power-mad) apparent love of science, which gives him a cheesy, overdone charisma that helped make the film watchable. And he has the slowest, least intense Evil Laugh ever.
 * Santa Claus Conquers the Martians, one of the stupidest films ever made. From the theme song to the ending credits...well, it's like a gruesome train accident or industrial disaster. You just can't look away. Apparently, the entire film was shot in a re-purposed aircraft hangar either on Long Island or environs. Oh...last but not least, the polar bear and the Martian robot must be seen to be believed.

""Oh my GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD!"
 * "One more sacrifice before we go?" "Alright, but this is The Final Sacrifice"
 * Time Chasers - food court...OF THE FUTURE!
 * Snakes on a Plane. The premise itself attracted a massive internet following based on its So Bad It's Good-ness, leading the makers to reshoot certain scenes to make them even more outlandish. Notable additions include a snake slithering out of the toilet bowl to latch onto the expected area of a man using the facilities, and Samuel L. Jackson's (in)famous line "I have had it with these motherfuckin' snakes on this motherfuckin' plane!". Did we mention how
 * The independent film studio Troma Entertainment specializes in films that are So Bad It's Good on purpose, the best known of which is The Toxic Avenger and its sequels.
 * And now there's a stage musical version! Can a radioactive mutant find love in a world that hates and fears him!?
 * Troma is now also responsible for Poultrygeist: Night of the Living Chicken, a movie that combines So Bad It's Good, crossed the line twice and possible brain damage for the viewer.
 * There are plenty of fantasy movies that fall under this category:
 * Conan The Destroyer. Another action film of The Eighties. Featured the classic line "Fine magician you are! Go back to juggling apples!" and Pat Roach in a Halloween mask lifting Arnie on his shoulders and trying to pull his arms off. Also, Grace Jones in a Fur Bikini.
 * The Scorpion King. Probably the most cliché-laden movie in history, but still watchable.
 * Krull. A critical and financial disaster that probably contains some of the best British actors available at the time. James Horner's film score is also highly regarded.
 * Dungeons and Dragons.
 * Hawk the Slayer. Classic 1980s Fantasy "epic". Wow, it's hilariously bad.
 * The Beastmaster.
 * The terrible 80s gem "Time Barbarians".
 * The first Resident Evil was spoilt by occasional moments of competence. Luckily, the sequel was several orders of magnitude worse, and all the more enjoyable for it (at least until L.J. opens his mouth). Sienna Guillory helped.
 * The Brady Bunch Movie and A Very Brady Sequel were both deliberate, and successful, attempts at So Bad It's Good.
 * The original English language dubs of Godzilla movies achieved this status by accident. Recent Godzilla movies have a lot more money for props and use good modern CG for energy weapons and vehicles, but you can still see the traditional zippers on the rubber monster suits. The very first movie, if you get the sub instead of the dub, is excellent.
 * The American remake of Godzilla is laughably bad to the point of hilarity.
 * Jesus Christ Vampire Hunter qualifies intentionally. It's a movie about how Jesus returns to Earth to fight lesbian vampires that are immune to sunlight. With the help of an overweight Mexican wrestler. And it's got a few musical numbers. Also the only movie in which you'll hear someone say, "We're running low on skin. I suggest we harvest another lesbian!"
 * Reefer Madness. It helps if you have smoked marijuana at least once in your life (and inhaled).
 * The Showtime musical (based on the off-off-off Broadway musical with Christian Campbell, Ana Gasteyer, Alan Cumming and Kristen Bell) was AWESOME! The DVD case smells like brownies.
 * Edgar Wright, director of Spaced, Shaun of the Dead, and Hot Fuzz, did quite a few little amateur films when he was younger. A notable one is Dead Right, a cop movie that parodies and homages Dirty Harry (the main character is nicknamed "Dirty Barry"), among other movies. It is an extra included on the two-disc Hot Fuzz DVD and includes both a commentary by Wright, which is quite informative, and another commentary by Simon Pegg and Nick Frost, which consists mostly of their tearing the movie to shreds. The movie itself is schizophrenic, switching between, as Wright describes it, "sub-Zucker Brothers nonsense" with random humor, a cop movie parody, and a splatter film. Notable scenes include the killer, wearing a bright orange raincoat, hiding from a woman by simply pressing up against a doorway (she walks straight past him despite his being in plain sight with no camouflage); Detective Barry Stern being assaulted by a cat; a very lengthy, gory (if food colouring counts as gore) fight scene where Barry and an MI 5 undercover agent (who looks like "every sound-man" according to Frost) decimate a gang of "box-monsters" (all in the killer's gang; the killer kills people who buy Weetabix, so he's a cereal killer); and a scene of almighty Fourth Wall breaking where the murderer kills Edgar Wright himself.
 * Killer Klowns From Outer Space. It has to be seen to be believed.
 * One hilarious quote from the movie: A tough biker has just crushed a Klown's tricycle. The Klown retaliates by putting on a pair of boxing gloves. "What are you gonna do, knock my block off?" And yes, the Klown does just that.
 * Mom and Dad Save The World. In one word, this film is SILLY...and we wouldn't have it any other way!
 * The first Alien vs. Predator movie. Alien and Predator going World Wrestling Federation on one another? Priceless. (It's worth mentioning that the commentary for Alien vs. Predator is genuinely entertaining, which is more than can be said for the movie.) Even worse (thus better) was the sequel.
 * In a similar vein, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. Extremely manly giant robots with deep Guttural Growler voices beating the crap out of each other for 2 hours. The various Ham and Cheese performances (Simmons, Jetfire, etc.) also make the Padding scenes somewhat watchable. The original cartoon movie similarly qualifies, but just replace the Visual Effects of Awesome with a completely kickass hair-metal soundtrack and brilliant performances by Orson Welles and Leonard Nimoy as Unicron and Galvatron.
 * Hercules in New York, Starring a 22 year old Arnold Schwarzenegger in his first film role. He is, at best, marginally fluent in English and given a ridiculous amount of speaking lines. In addition, Zeus's lightning is bent rebar painted white, and Hur-ka-leez's fight with the "bear" is simply hilarious.
 * Plus you can hear the background traffic noise in the "Mount Olympus" scenes, as it was shot in a public park.
 * Some gods are referred to by their Greek names while others are referred to by their Roman names. And Samson, of biblical fame, is in there for some reason.
 * Hercules also has a Jewish sidekick.
 * Also starring Arnold Schwarzenegger: Jingle All the Way. The "Turbo Man" stuff is particularly hilariously bad, but Ah-nold is a pretty good comedic Straight Man.
 * Troll 2 is considered a cinematic masterpiece by some, due to how hilariously bad it is. It features vegetarian monsters that turn people into lumpy green Jello (a plant-based version, apparently) so they can eat them. The monsters appear to be dwarves running around in cheap Halloween masks (actually designed, along with the costumes, by '70s erotica actress Laura Gemser). There is a sex scene that has to be seen to be believed (and then may require multiple viewings). The line, "You can't piss on hospitality! I won't allow it!" is included and is meant literally. Also, there are no trolls in the movie. Not a single one.

"Nilbog! It's Goblin spelled backwards!""

"Haley: "AHHHH! HE TOUCHED MY BREAST!""
 * Ghost Fever, starring Sherman Hemsley. Hard to find, but absolutely worth the search.
 * Fortunately, it's now on Netflix streaming.
 * Double Dragon would be a tremendous case of Video Game Movies Suck, only this one sucks in such an energetic and flamboyant way as to be hilarious and stylish. Despite its backstory being set in a dystopian, post-apocalyptic Los Angeles, the film often subverts the expected gritty aesthetic and goes for some of the most colorful, goofy, and oftentimes disproportionately elaborate visuals ever in an action film, from goofy costumes to nice cameos by actual Double Dragon arcade cabinets. The finale has a hilarious scene that looks essentially like a bunch of dressed-up circus performers engaged in a mass-melee, and the fact that the stars have genuine martial arts talent even extends the ordeal into Crazy Awesome territory.
 * Adding to this, for some reason the film is still rather popular on Latin American television, and some viewers claim that being dubbed in Spanish makes it even funnier.
 * Night of the Lepus, a film whose plot centers around Arizona being under attack by Giant Killer Bunny Rabbits. Yes, this is a real movie. Starring real actors, like Janet Leigh and Stuart Whitman (and De Forest Kelley), and made by real major studio MGM. It's all made even more surreal by the fact that the Giant Killer Bunny Rabbits are depicted by either (1) cute domesticated bunnies filmed in extreme close-up running around on scale-model sets, (2) hilariously awful-looking gore-smeared puppets, or (3) guys in tacky-looking bunny suits (for the attack scenes, naturally). In the end it has to be seen to be believed.
 * Actually, this movie made it into the background of The Matrix. It is on the background TV when Neo first goes to see the Oracle.
 * The Japanese film Versus is like this as far as its acting, plot, and setting go. The action scenes, however, are spectacular. Another hallmark of it being So Bad It's Good is that the commentary features the director, the producer, and three of the actors, and they were probably all drunk when they recorded it. Japanese B movies seem to have an incredible ability to take a really silly premise, fill it with gore then play everything without a hint of irony.
 * Space Jam. Something about Michael Jordan's super-mellow attempts at acting whilst surrounded by the biggest hams of Looney Tunes.
 * The part where Daffy kisses his own, Warner Bros.-emblazoned arse suggests they knew the film was blatant marketing fodder for all the attached Merchandise-Driven. Cemented by the point later on, where Bugs and Daffy complain that they don't get any royalties.
 * It's completely canon.
 * To give Jordan some credit, as bad as his acting is, you have to remember that, for the most part, he's supposed to be interacting with something that isn't even there.
 * That, and from the perspective of a ten-year-old, Jordan's stretch-dunk from half-court was the most awesome thing he'd ever seen.
 * The DVD compilation Sleazy Slashers has six movies, each of which fall into this trope. Maybe not Back Woods, though.
 * If you want the best unintentional comedy of the 1990s, see the dubbed version of the Hong-Kong-Funded-Japanese-Manga-Adaptation called The Story of Ricky (Riki-oh), which is best described as "The Shawshank Redemption Meets The Itchy and Scratchy Show, starring Kenshiro of Fist of the North Star, live action."
 * Ultraviolet. A worldwide vampire epidemic where they never mention the word "vampire". Plus they walk around in the daylight. And when she meets up with the bad guy, he gives her a very swishy, "Oh, it is on" before the big final battle. And there's a giant Nestle Wonderball full of vampire ninjas. And the Mama Bear turned up to 11. The coolness of the gravity belt and Violet's arsenal [and her fiber optic hairdos] offset it enough, maybe.
 * Attack of the Killer Tomatoes is a ludicrously goofy film that seems to be deliberately aiming for this effect(complete with Lampshade Hanging of its own absurdity).
 * The Lou Ferrigno version of Sinbad Of The Seven Seas. How else would you describe a movie where The Incredible Hulk escapes prison by escaping on a chain of snakes?
 * John Steiner's performance in this film. Why? One exclamation: "HA!" Also..."For the last time: I command you, in the name of all that is evil...Budge! BUDGE!"
 * The Wizard (film). A film about an autistic kid who wants nothing more than to play video games. 90 minutes of Product Placement for Nintendo's finest (Ninja Gaiden, Double Dragon, and Super Mario Bros 3, which hadn't even come out in America at the time yet) and, uh...not-so-finest ("I love the Power Glove, it's so bad.") Don't make fun of us for adding the entry to this list. It's very hot...* KO punch*
 * This classic bit of dialogue:

"Lex Luthor: You know what I can do with a single strand of Superman's hair? Lenny Luthor: You can make a toupee that flies!"
 * It's an awesome film, just because it features Fred Savage from The Wonder Years and Jenny Lewis (of the band Rilo Kiley). You can't not love it at least a little.
 * There was a radio interview with Rilo Kiley where the host brought up The Wizard. Jenny Lewis's reaction was the kind of, "Oh," you make when you've just been caught farting. The rest of the interview went downhill from there.
 * Crocodile 2: Death Swamp! should definitely count. The deaths are completely predictable for the Genre Savvy. Also, there were several laugh out loud moments. For instance,  No, it doesn't make sense in context either.
 * Phelous's review of the film.
 * Superman IV. Terrible if you watch it with the mindset that it's a serious movie; hilarious if you watch it with the mindset that it's endearingly and riotously bad. See: Christopher Reeve's delivery of the line "Stop, don't do it, the people!". Incredibly obvious wires. Jon Cryer calling Superman "The Dude of Steel!". Superman's Rebuilding-the-Great-Wall-of-China-vision...
 * And all that without even mentioning the whole everybody-breathing-in-space thing...honestly. Space has an atmosphere, in this movie. You really haven't lived until you've seen Supes posing heroically against the star-spangled void, cape flapping madly.
 * Breathe in space? In their fight scene, Superman and Nuclear Man walk on space. They walk on an invisible floor in space. They step around each other, in space.
 * According to the book (yes, book not booklet) accompanying Superman: The Music 1978-1988 (with the complete scores from all four films plus music from the Ruby-Spears cartoon), the fight scene was supposed to be in the sky above Metropolis. If this isn't a Special Effects Failure...
 * Finally, the following lines:

""Luckily, the script writers realized what they were working with and wrote some of the cheesiest, most badass dialogue in any movie ever. I don't know how they did it, but every single line in the movie is completely corny but awesome at the same time. This results in the audience getting a good laugh in the fifteen minutes of the movie when people aren't getting their arms ripped off or aliens aren't being exploded into pieces and spewing green fluid all over the place.""
 * Although the "Don't do it the people" line was lifted verbatim from Superman II, from just before Zod and Ursa lob a bus full of bystanders at Superman.
 * Another subtle nod to the earlier films: when the Kryptonians escaped the Phantom Zone and landed on the moon, Non knocked the flag over; after trapping Nuclear Man in a crater on the dark side of the moon, Superman puts the flag pole back where it belongs.
 * The scene of rotating earth backwards in the otherwise flawless first movie of the series definitely qualifies.
 * Hackers. A completely clueless look at hacker subculture that still manages to be amusing. Practically defines the Everything Is Online trope and the Hollywood version of the Playful Hacker. Little known fact: cracking systems always involves flying through a 3D environment filled with floating incomprehensible algebraic equations and psychedelic backdrops.
 * Heavy Metal is like a parody of those drawings that most of us guys used to draw in 5th grade of guns, dismemberment, and boobs. None of the characters act like human beings. The women are invariably naked or half-naked. The animation is all over the place. It has quite the cult following and one sweet soundtrack.
 * Anything by John Waters.
 * Andreas Schnaas's gore movies. They're fun because of their bad dubbed voices, horrible effects (the baby cut into half a la Kung Lao is a plastic doll!) and worse titles (Violent Shit, anyone?)
 * The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra is one of those rare intentional examples of this trope, an Affectionate Parody of the worst of the worst B-movies of the '50s and '60s, with nonsensical dialogue, wooden acting, and plenty of Special Effect Failure.
 * AND IT IS GLORIOUS!
 * John Candy starred in quite a few movies with this trope in during the '90s. Notable examples include Nothing but Trouble and Once Upon A Crime. In the late seventies though he starred in a drama-horror flick titled The Clown Murders. The funny thing being that the villain in The Clown Murders is a guy in a clown mask and only appears a few minutes later on in the movie.
 * And then there's Starship Troopers. Badass of the Week.com explains best:

"Yor's world, he's the man! Yor's world, he's the man!"
 * A certain Asian grindhouse gem of a movie called Ninja Wars is a fantastic example of this trope. The plot involves a prophecy: "He who wins the heart of Lady Ukyodaio [sic] will hold the world in his hands" and an evil Japanese warlord concocting an aphrodisiac using the famous SPIDER teakettle to further his aims. The movie then veers off wildly and confusingly every which way, including several fight scenes involving the Five Devil Monks, one of whom vomits acid to attack, a plan to put Ukyodaio's severed head on the hero's girlfriend's body to fulfill the prophesy, and more hilariously bad dubbing than you can shake a stick at. The movie ends The dubbing is universally terrible.
 * Ready to Rumble, a movie made to capitalize on the Professional Wrestling phenomenon of the late '90s thanks to the WWF's Attitude Era, was produced with their competition! WCW used this to try to regain their popularity after Mick Foley put their fans' asses in the WWF's seats, and boy did it bomb! The only redeeming qualities about this movie is the unintentional humor and future WCW Champion David Arquette attempting the Spear.
 * Sheena, where Tanya Roberts stars as a Faux Action Girl who rides around Darkest Africa on a horse with zebra stripes painted on, while an implausible plot and bad special effects happen all around her. Roberts' nude scene compensates for her lack of acting skills.
 * One can only assume that Mystery Science Theater 3000 never attempted to riff on Dünyayi kurtaran adam (The Man Who Saves the World, a.k.a. Turkish Star Wars) because no running commentary could possibly make this movie any funnier.
 * There are no words that can adequately describe the horror of this film; after you recover from the numbing shock of it all you can do is laugh endlessly.
 * Star Trek V the Final Frontier; it is only awful if you're a Star Trek fan.
 * Some fans of Star Trek also consider the movie So Bad It's Good-the type of fan who also love "Spock's Brain" and "Threshold".
 * That, and it does have its moments. Also, no individual "terrible" aspect of the movie would ruin any other Star Trek movie on its own; it's really that Star Trek V was unfortunate enough to have so many of them that it really became bad.
 * The somewhat silly Russian fairy-tale movie Morozko ("Father Frost", or "Jack Frost" on Mystery Science Theater 3000). It aired every Christmas on Czechoslovak TV during the Communist era, over time becoming a cult classic. Not only did television stations continue to air it after the revolution, but a musical and a video game based on the movie were made. (The film was recently redubbed into Slovak, so that Slovak televisions don't have to air it in Czech.)
 * Jensen Ackles might have tried his hardest and he certainly plays the "pretty-boy woobie with issues" very well, but Devour will now and forever be a hot, yet entertaining, mess.
 * If you watch The Happening as a comedy rather than a horror film, then it's one of the best movies ever made. As one person put it: "Never before has a movie made people dying so hilarious."
 * "WHY YOU EYEIN' MAH LEMON DRINK?"
 * "Do you like hot dogs? No? I like hot dogs. I think hot dogs get a bad rap."
 * "I can see in calculus."
 * Pootie Tang. Perhaps the single greatest concentration of stupid in any one film since the introduction of sound. It's also hilarious.
 * Stupid doesn't begin to describe it. There is one scene where the main character's father is killed in the steel mill where he works... by a gorilla. Or should we say, a man in a gorilla costume. No explanation, just a Gorilla runs in and starts killing him. It is descrbed as "the third Gorilla related death at that Steel mill". Him screaming "Gorilla!" while he's being killed has to be heard to be believed.
 * 1998's Wild Things. It was billed as a thriller, but it plays like a spoof. In addition to some truly horribly staged scenes and awful dialogue, it has some exceptional scenery chewing from Denise Richards and Kevin Bacon. Only Bill Murray seemed to be aware that the movie was meant to be tongue in cheek. The film's twist ending, though not too difficult to either see coming or figure out once revealed,.
 * It also has a great story buried under bad writing and mediocre acting. It's like watching a movie of a Carl Hiaasen novel, certainly more than the Film of the Book of Strip Tease.
 * The 1989 film Listen To Me. Other than Denzel Washington's The Great Debaters, it's the only mainstream American film (eg not documentary etc.) about debating, and it is so bad it's absolutely hilarious, especially if you're a debater. It's a cult classic in university debating circles, many debating societies holding regular screenings of it.
 * Another niche example: for lack of anything better to do, this editor sat down and watched a screening of the movie Duets, and at first found it to be a corny but endearing spoof of karaoke and the people who take it seriously. Then he checked the listing to see that it was billed as a drama, and he couldn't stop laughing from that point on. To paraphrase Seanbaby, it is to karaoke fans what Over the Top was to arm wrestling fans: a brutal and lasting reminder of why you shouldn't make movies about those people. And why not? Over the Top too.
 * The films of Godfrey Ho, or any of his aliases, particularly his later masterworks Honor & Glory and Undefeatable, both starring Cynthia Rothrock. The latter film has become something of a sensation of late.
 * Liquid Sky, a 1982 midnight movie involving aliens who feed on endorphins released from heroin and sex. It stars Margret, a cocaine-addicted fashion model who "kills with her cunt". The clothing and soundtrack is based off the trashiest parts of the early 80s, complete with glow in the dark makeup.
 * Starcrash is an Italian Star Wars rip-off that is just mind numbingly horrible in every single way: acting, continuity, props, special effects, plot, it even has the robot sidekick. It truly is so bad it's good. Or at least endlessly funny. An early appearance of David Hasselhoff. And Marjoe Gortner with a lightsaber.
 * Yor, the Hunter from the Future; One of the funniest Conan the Barbarian rip-offs of its time, featuring the star of Space Mutiny, and an incomprehensible yet Crazy Awesome theme song:


 * And THE GREATEST THING EVER CAPTURED ON FILM.
 * Torque - a movie for those who thought The Fast And The Furious was too highbrow and grounded in reality. Hypnotically stupid. That Ice Cube is the best actor in the entire movie (by far) is just gravy.
 * Crystal meth, bike fights, and motorcycles that move so fast, they can ignite gasoline from DRIVING OVER IT. To put it in a word: "retardalicious".
 * Super Mario Bros
 * The 1993 Made for TV Movie The Man from Left Field. A bunch of poor kids looking for a baseball coach find Burt Reynolds, a Mysterious Figure who has gotten Easy Amnesia and forgotten everything but his Good Solid Values. Since it's three times as long as your typical Very Special Episode, they compensate by having three Very Special Storylines. One kid is teased by the obligatory rich rival team about his working-class father, cuing an Author Filibuster from Burt about how Money doesn't matter as much as Values. Another kid is abused at home (his alcoholic father beats him with his fists, which somehow results in the kid getting lash marks on his back) so Burt kicks the dad's butt. The token black kid loses his grandfather to Soap Opera Disease, which is somehow resolved by Burt saving the kid from drowning (no, you read that right). In the midst of all this, the film achingly struggles to be "cute" and there's also a lame Token Romance with Reba McEntire thrown in for good measure, even though the film seems to be aimed at ten-year-old boys (the kids have no girls on their team). Finally, the scene where Burt regains his memories has to be seen to be believed.
 * The animated version of The Hobbit. Here's Bilbo. And this is Gollum. Now imagine sitting through 90 minutes of that, including songs.
 * Hippie folks songs, at that. Even children watching this movie would have to ask "What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?"
 * You want a real Christian preaching MST3Kable film? Look no further than Megiddo: The Omega Code 2. This movie truly has it all: acting and dialogue so awkward and bad you wonder if the writers, actors and the director were somehow deprived of human contact and think people actually act like that; Udo Kier playing a character that does nothing but follow the Big Bad around wearing a Black Cloak and sounding like he had just left the Command and Conquer: Yuri's Revenge soundstage; R. Lee Ermey playing the President of the United States (sadly ); and best of all, Michael "Basil Exposition" York playing the Antichrist as a Large Ham of truly planetary proportions.
 * The first The Omega Code also qualifies, with Casper Van Dien and Micheal Ironside in addition to Micheal York. Their performances are so fun to watch. Its also rather subtle for being a End Times film (until the end). Its a bad flim, but enjoyable.
 * The Apple: A disco musical about the futuristic world of 1994 that's also an allegory for the Book of Revelation. Really, every single element of this movie will make you say "WTF?".
 * "Gameraaaaaaaa! Gameraaaaa! Gamera is really neat! Gamera is filled with meat! We've been eating Gameraaaa! Long story short, the Gamera films of the 1960s had even worse effects than the Godzilla films of the 70s, really bad dubbing, and some of the most ludicrous plots ever (For example, the ending of the first movie has ). This doesn't stop the movies from being cheesy fun for people of all ages.
 * A couple of the James Bond films fall under this:
 * You Only Live Twice. Blofeld's plot is to capture space pods in the middle of their missions (and this is shown with rather stupid-looking special effects). Bond is given a short training period to learn the ways of the Ninja before getting one of the dumbest looking disguises as a Japanese man (which didn't change that he still towers over everybody else). Even the villains weren't fooled. The film ends with a Battle Royale With Cheese in the famous hollowed out volcano lair, with dozens of ninjas fighting with traditional swords and shuriken against the assault rifle armed Mooks... and winning. The script was written by Roald Dahl.
 * Diamonds Are Forever has gay assassins, James Bond in a moon buggy with flailing arms, Blofeld dressed as a woman, and missiles exploding due to laser satellite with really cheap and dated effects.
 * Octopussy. Nothing else needs to be added, really. It doesn't cross into any worse category due to the surprisingly solid plotline under all the cheese.
 * Live and Let Die. The sheer hilarity of watching Roger Moore trying to infiltrate a soul food shack in 1970's Harlem has to be experienced. Yaphet Kotto turning into a Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade float and then exploding, the weird sub-plot/theme involving voodoo and the Baron Samedi and the ridiculous alligator pit escape. Paradoxically, it has what may arguably be the best Bond Theme of all the films and a fantastic boat chase scene.
 * Casino Royale 1967 is an odd example, being a shot at deliberate So Bad It's Good... that failed miserably, but thanks to Development Hell (the film went through six directing teams, and it shows), a cast studded with wasted talent ranging from Woody Allen to Orson Welles, an incomprehensibly muddled "plot," and a finale that completely defies description, it manages to be So Bad It's Good at being So Bad It's Good.
 * Kunoichi: Lady Ninja is about a bunch of women becoming ninja to get revenge for the sacking of their village with the help of a one-eyed samurai, or something like that. Not much stuck with me except for the thing that makes it awesome: one of the women had some kind of power that related to her virginity, so when she and the samurai were trapped, she told him to bang her so that blood from her torn hymen would fall on his sword and save them.
 * A great many educational films are so campy and badly made that they end up being just plain funny. There's one about electrical safety, with a Jerkass villain reminiscent of Beetlejuice called Electrojuice.
 * One home economics video where had the narrator saying, "Quiche. Pronounced...keesh" in a monotone. Also, possibly in the same film, the narrator says something about never touching pans in the oven with your bare hands and then proceeds to do so, going "Ouch. That's hot" again in a monotone.
 * In the same vein: a certain Spanish video, with the line, "This is my brother, Antonio. We call him 'Antonio'."
 * The 2008 film Doomsday. Scottish cannibal ninja strippers? Check. Malcolm McDowell as the nutty king of Medieval Land (for about five minutes)? Check. Auto-targeting machine gun turrets vaporizing a cute widdle bunny-wunny? Check. If there was ever, ever a film crying out for the MST3K treatment, THIS IS THE ONE.
 * It could also be argued as a deliberately over-the-top Refuge in Cool.
 * Also contributing to the effect is the crippling multiple-genre-disorder Doomsday suffers from: Epidemic Movie --> Search-and-Rescue Team Movie --> Dystopian Apocalypse Movie --> Zombie Movie --> Swords & Sorcery Movie --> Car-Racing Movie --> It's-All-A-Government-Conspiracy Movie, and that's not even the half of it.
 * The movie was taking 28 Days Later, Escape from New York, Damnation Alley, and Mad Max 2, putting them in a blender and seeing what happened. Apparently, the lead character was essentially supposed to be a female version of Snake Plissken.
 * Overlords of the UFO is a rare So Bad It's Good documentary, though we do use that term lightly.
 * Heartbeeps, a somewhat obscure 1981 movie about two robots - played by Andy Kaufman and Bernadette Peters - who fall in love and build a child (whose beeps and boops were provided by Jerry Garcia). And it's scored by John Williams. Watchable only for the gorgeous costumes, Stan Winston's Oscar-nominated makeup work, and the excellent soundtrack.
 * In its defense, some scenes are quite touching...
 * Collision Course. A buddy cop comedy from the '80s that has Jay Leno teaming up with Pat "Mr Miyagi" Morita to restore a stolen car.
 * Fright Night. A classic '80s vampire movie featuring Chris Sarandon as a vampire, lots of Special Effects and a wacky character named Evil Ed. It also features a character from Ghostbusters; the rejected librarian ghost puppet.
 * The oeuvre of one Roger Corman generally falls into this category.
 * Flash Gordon. The ratings prove it!
 * Deathstalker II was an over-the-top parody of the first Deathstalker movie. You don't have to see Deathstalker to appreciate Deathstalker II; it's a great parody of adventurer movies with silly plots and premises, bad acting, and bizarre scenes that don't match up with the rest of the movie. But then they went and made a third just like the first, ignoring that the second existed.
 * Oh, the first Deathstalker belongs here too. Where else can you get a movie with an immortal guy being killed, a random fight scene in a brothel where everyone pauses to let Deathstalker and the immortal guy chat before going right back to fighting, and the witch who Deathstalker tells not to speak in riddles, although everything she says is perfectly understandable?
 * Deathstalker 4, also known as Troll 3. What kind of fool tries to capitalize on Troll 2?
 * Surf Ninjas. "Cigarettes?" "Yeah, yeah, I know I should quit." This is in a kids movie too.
 * Leslie Nielsen portraying a very hammy evil Asian cyborg overlord. Who keeps missing his phone calls that end up on his answering machine, though his minions never bother leaving a message.
 * Surf Nazis Must Die has scary scary gangs consisting of about three twelve year olds, stock surfing film for padding, camp Nazis ... and it's terribly entertaining.
 * Fatal Deviation is without a doubt the most incredibly awesome Irish martial arts movie to ever exist. See for yourself!.
 * Fantasy Mission Force is a completely incoherent mess that tries to be a war movie about a band of mercenaries trying to rescue Allied generals (including Abraham Lincoln) from the Axis, who took them to Canada. Just watch the restaurant scene.

Jackie Chan himself gets about fifteen minutes of screen time as a minor character, who apparently wins at the end after all the main characters die. The movie includes such gems as sudden and inexplicable barbarian raiders, the Great American General Abraham Lincoln, and the deep and startling realization that a Chinese actor will never ever make a convincing Scotsman, even if you do dress him in a kilt. Watching the dubbed version just makes it all better. ""This is for Sand! This is for me! And this...is for MUFFIN!""
 * The whole concept is parodied in the French movie La Cité de la Peur (The City of Fear): the horror movie Red is Dead is a textbook example of So Bad It's Good and critics hate it with a passion. Then someone dressed up as Red 's serial killer starts hacking projectionists to bits with a hammer and a sickle, and it's instant glory. The star and publicist of the movie get to walk on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival.
 * Dragon Wars, also known as D-War. Lots of convoluted Korean mythology, plot holes as far as the eye can see. It's unintentionally hilarious.
 * The Machine Girl. Gatling Gun Arm attached to a schoolgirl, Ninjas that look like Football players, and 1970s violence despite being a 2008 movie, and a Drill Bra. What makes this so hilarious, is its genre is listed Action/Adventure. A lot of schlocky movies are hard to watch because of padding. This film replaces padding with High-Pressure Blood.
 * Rock 'n' Roll Nightmare, also known as The Edge of Hell. It's a 1987 Canadian horror film that was filmed in seven days and went straight to video. Features Jon Mikl Thor as Triton, lead singer for a metal band, who fights Satan himself. Clad a cape, studded codpiece and tons of makeup and hairspray. Includes Muppet demons, cycloptic starfish creatures and the line:
 * " Ah, you've killed no one bub- or is it less familiar to call you BEELZEBUB!"
 * The Nicolas Cage remake of The Wicker Man. As far as some viewers are concerned, it is the best comedy of 2006.
 * Body Rock. A 1984 break dancing movie about a guy named Chilly who finds fame and then forgets his friends, although it takes a few viewings to actually comprehend this. Features terrible dialogue, an ostensibly crackhead mother who doesn't care what her son does with his time, a random black child who inexplicably hangs out with 20 year olds and gives dancing lessons in the street, a gigantic boombox, rhinestones adorning the face of the male protagonist, a pleather trench coat with "Chilly" graffitied on the back, and a really frightening song.
 * Shark Attack 3: Megalodon is most notable for featuring some of the most stupidly hilarious special effects and an infamous cheesy line from a pre-Doctor Who John Barrowman among other silly things.
 * Flight Of The Living Dead. Snakes on a Plane with zombies instead of snakes, and without high production values and any shred of self-awareness.
 * Kazaam, a 1996 movie about a rapping genie that's released by a kid. Some of the scenes are strange and extremely creepy. And Shaq's god-awful rapping skills. "Let's Green Eggs and Ham it" indeed.
 * Berry Gordy's The Last Dragon. The Hero is a Bruce Lee fanboy and the main villain claims to be "The Shogun Of Harlem". And then there's The Glow. How can you not love this movie!?
 * Stan Lee's Harpies: Bad acting, ridiculous plot, and the most cheesiest special effect in town. Screams TV movie.
 * The Romanians of several centuries ago in the film somehow speak American-accented English.
 * Most Syfy Original Movies in general shoot for the So Bad It's Good Trope.
 * Ben 10 Race Against Time: The TV show was cliche enough but as a live action flick its fall flat on it cliche ridden fridge logic face. Least it had some decent SFX. And then there's Lee Majors as Grandpa Max.
 * The 2008 remake of the 1980 slasher flick Prom Night is hilariously bad. First off, it's a slasher flick rated PG-13. As if that wasn't bad enough, the movie plays out almost every possible applicable cliché, but in a tremendously boring way. The plot is lousy, the acting is bad, even for this genre, the suspense is as exciting as watching grass grow, and the teenage melodrama bullshit is pathetic.
 * Also, it tried really, really hard to jump-scare the audience with bedroom decor. Lamp DUN!
 * Frank Miller's directorial debut The Spirit is by all rights, a terrible film. However, Miller dials the cheesiness up to such ludicrous levels that one can't help but be at least slightly entertained by it.


 * Samuel L. Jackson plays The Octopus as over-the top as possible. It's a significant surprise when he appears for the first time, you expect a menacing character...and then he whacks The Spirit over the head with a toilet while explaining that toilet humor is always funny.

""You're tearing me APART, Lisa!""
 * The Shadow.
 * Mister T's Be Somebody...or Be Somebody's Fool. Considering that in many ways T. is either the Anthropomorphic Personification or the patron saint of So Bad It's Good...So yeah...fool!
 * The Room, which is supposedly "the best worst movie ever made", dubbed by one Entertainment Weekly reviewer "the Citizen Kane of bad movies." The Onion explains it here. The Room supposedly has more than just a bad plot and bad acting - its full of failed drama and has terrible focus and transitions. It not clear if the director did so on purpose.

""I never thought it would be the bees. They were always our friends!""
 * Tommy Wiseau, the films creator (director-writer-producer-star and main advertiser) claims it was intentional; an actor from the film says instead that Wiseau was very sincere. Many find it easier to believe the actor, especially as it was originally advertised as a serious melodrama.
 * C Me Dance'. It's so unbelievable, most people think that link is just a fake trailer or at least a Stealth Parody until they discover otherwise. At first it just seems like your run-of-the-mill shitty cancer story, but then the cancer patient is the Messiah and then this makes the devil angry so then it turns into a horror movie, except Satan doesn't do'' anything. He buggers off to nurse his hurt feelings because the lead calls him a "loser." And the tagline is "A Dance That Shines Through Darkness." Just thought that deserved mentioning.
 * Most things featured in The Smithee Awards are bad but have some entertainment value in their badness. (Long story short: a bunch of people look for bad B-movies, take bad moments from them and "nominate" them in categories like Inane Dialogue and Most Ludicrous Premise. Just read the damn website.) Some of the things on this page have "won" Smithee Awards.
 * Grease 2 makes the first one look like Les Miserables by comparison. Among the changes: an inferior script, much less angst (and most of what is there qualifies as Wangst), far less actual sex, much more singing about sex. It's a good time!
 * The obscure Sharon Stone film Scissors is full of bad acting and just plain hilarious plot threads like a pair of identical twins whose conflict just comes across as bizarre...but what it pushes it over the top is the ending,.
 * Batman: The Movie. Where to start? The Exploding Shark warded off by Anti Shark Repellent Bat spray, the over-the-top acting, the surreal dialogue, goofy effects and the bomb you just can't get rid of somedays... But it also has former Ms. America Lee Meriwether in a sexy catsuit and Batman driving a Lincoln Futura.
 * The bizarre methods of figuring out which villains are involved are roll-on-the-floor hilarious ("It happened on the sea...C! For Catwoman!") as are the amazing speed at which they figure out the riddles ("A sparrow with a machine gun!"). And the dehydrated pirates
 * Speaking of Batman, Batman Forever also count. They are so bad they are cool.
 * The Swarm, an Attack of the Killer Whatever movie which represents the stupidest of Irwin Allen's disaster movies. A cast full of reputable names had their talents wasted on a silly script, one of these names being Michael Caine, who shouts his way through the movie. The killer bees are made of Special Effect Failure. Helicopters and train cars explode dramatically upon crashing (the latter turn into obvious models first).

""This is my happening, and it freaks me out!!""
 * Dragon Ball Evolution is possibly the most over the top film ever made, yet it sucks so hard it's just funny to watch to see what they got wrong. In fact, this movie is So Bad It's Good only when you don't see it as Dragon Ball. But if you want to see a true example, watch the old Chinese adaptation Dragon Ball: The Magic Begins.
 * This movie is So Bad It's Good even by some critics' standards (at least those who knew not to take the film seriously). For example, Alfonso Duralde of MSNBC, who generally doesn't like anything save very few exceptions, said the movie was "both entertainingly ridiculous and ridiculously entertaining."
 * The Springtime For Hitler play (that one) from The Producers.
 * Specifically, it was intended to be just offensive, but the portrayal of Hitler (either by a hippie or the Camp Gay director) made it So Offensive It's Hilarious.
 * Zardoz. It represents the collision of high ideals and low abilities perfectly, and contains the line: "The gun is good - the penis is EVIL!" Also notable for featuring Sean Connery in a red diaper.
 * Absolute Zero is like The Day After Tomorrow but even worse. Think new Ice Age in Miami.
 * Starving Jesus is a film by two pastors trying to get people off the pews and into missions. It starts off by them picking fights with hotel receptionists and ends with one of the pastors sniping about how he thinks the other is sneaking food (they're supposed to be fasting). Generally not something that you want to introduce people to Christianity with. However, amazing to watch, the best part probably being the colonoscopy scene. Awesomeness ensues.
 * Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, is known for being campy and embarrassing because it ruined the once promising careers of its four main stars, Peter Frampton and The Bee Gees and many Beatles fans and purists, just don't like hearing other people (badly) sing their idols songs.
 * If the movie and the music are so awful, why is Aerosmith's "Come Together" from the movie a popular fixture on classic rock radio stations.
 * Because one good song and performance do not a good movie or soundtrack make.
 * The movie had so many teenyboppers thinking Frampton and the Bee Gees created Sgt. Pepper that Capitol records re-released the Beatles' version with an affixed label "The Original Classic." The movie Yellow Submarine also made new rounds in syndication (with its on-screen credit "Starring Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band").
 * Robo Geisha. The trailer is just so ridiculous, it's hilarious.
 * Semi-Conscious Driving in the Real World is a video about driving around trucks shown in driving schools.
 * In that same vein, a film called "Seven Deadly Shipmates," a US Navy training film from the 70s, in which seven people do rather silly things (most of them, like removing air-caps from a breathing-mask manifold, rather inconsequential) that ultimately result in the sinking of a ship due to fire; other things, like stacking garbage in the middle of a passage-way, resulting in hilarious panicked-sailor pile-ups, seemed like very funny common sense issues to avoid (but it is the military, after all). They were still playing it in boot camp as recently as April 2009. Seriously, nobody saw that hatch open?
 * Babylon A.D. is notable for Vin Diesel dragging a shrieking, flailing, judgemental psuedo-Messiah across post-apocalyptic Russia, only to find out . It has one of the most poorly explained/edited Gainax Endings this side of Japan, but it's still an entertaining Vin-Diesel-punches-people movie.
 * The 2005 Syfy channel original movie Alien Apocalypse, starring Bruce Campbell. Astronauts return to Earth after 40 years in suspended animation to find it conquered by alien termites who have enslaved humanity to... harvest wood? Cue La Résistance, cheesy special effects, Dr. Ivan kicking ass, bad acting, and lots of green ichor.
 * Nearly everything on the Syfy channel is this trope. And what a great channel it is!
 * The obscure kids' movie Napoleon, which seems to be Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey-inspired. Where to start? The Random Events Plot filled with Wacky Wayside Critters? The very loud musical score? The fact that the animals seem to have not so much been trained to act as placed on the sets and filmed doing whatever they feel like until something close enough to what's in the script happens? The fact that it was re-dubbed in America despite being made in Australia? Here's the kicker: It came free in a box of cereal.
 * Beyond The Valley of the Dolls. A Hollywood camp-fest about a band of female musicians, taken to the Nth power and waaay beyond. Infamously, Roger Ebert helped write the script.


 * The original Buffy the Vampire Slayer movie. She's blonde, she's a cheerleader, and she slays vampires.
 * The Syfy original film Vampires: Los Muertos starring Bon Jovi as a surfer/vampire slayer. He tries to stop a vampire takeover with the help of a naive teenage boy, a half-turned woman, a priest  and a big black guy with a machine gun.
 * So Dragonslayer was groundbreaking in its day. That doesn't stop it from being absolutely friggin' hilarious. The part where the evil knight gives a (completely logical) rant about how stupidly credulous everyone's being about the wizard? And the wizard asks him to stab him if he truly thinks he's powerless? And when he does, the wizard keels over and dies? Priceless.
 * Tokyo Gore Police, a movie about a virus that has people getting limbs cut off and growing back weaponised, includes gun barrels coming out of someone's eye sockets, a stripper with her legs replaced by the top and bottom of a crocodile mouth with vagina in between, a cannon penis, an amputee gimp that walks on four swords placed on each of her stumps. There is lots of blood-colored water. Everywhere.
 * You can watch... Suspiria... you can laugh... at Suspiria... but you cannot escape the bizarre silliness that is...Suspiria!
 * You gotta love that Goblin score though.
 * Friday the 13 th eventually settles, and arguably, revels in this.
 * Jason X easily takes the cake. When a slasher movie can best be summarized as "Like the previous 9, but IN SPACE", you know you've got something good before you even start watching.

"Giant Mook (blows up a police car with a bazooka and is met with disbelieving stares from his comrades): What? Too much?"
 * The Giant Claw has decent acting (though not great) and acceptable dialogue, which prevent the all-dialogue scenes from being unbearable (though an inordinate number of things are compared to battleships), but the real draws are the terrible science and [[media:lolclaw.png|one of the silliest-looking monsters of all time]].
 * Black Sheep has some hammy acting, a cheesy plot, and horri-awesome special affects that, separately, would make it a very bad movie. But, all together, they make something that is pure campy and self-aware B-Movie fun.
 * Galaxina arguably does this on purpose...when you make AVERY FRIKKIN' SCHREIBER a starship captain, you've already decided you aren't making the next Star Wars.
 * The German movie Die unglaublichen Abenteuer des Guru Jakob (The Incredible Adventures of Jakob the Guru). Starring German ex-child star Tommi Ohrner as the High School Hustler (wannabe) Tommi and Israeli Zachi Noy, veteran of the soft-sex comedy film series Lemon Popsicle, as the titular Jakob Feierabend, who spent his time getting fired from various jobs and being rejected by girls, until he is mistaken for an Indian guru, like Baghwan, by the people of an Upper Bavarian village, who are looking for somebody to buy the old castle of the village, and soon unwillingly starts his own cult, with Tommi as his manager. Add porn star Sibylle Rauch as Ms. Fanservice and a Chinese restaurant owner for Chop Sockey kung fu action and Unfortunate Implications. It's like a mixture of slapstick, sex comedy, Bavarian Heimatfilm, youth movie and "let's pretend we warn people of the danger of strange sects"-film. Oh, and the repeatedly played song "Hey, ho, nochmal Schwein gehabt" (Hey, ho, got lucky again).
 * An intentional example is Dead Snow, a Norwegian zombie/splatter-movie about a group of students on a camping trip in northern Norway who encounter a battalion of zombiefied Nazi soldiers. Writer/director Tommy Wirkola is a huge fan of classic horror b-movies such as Evil Dead, and Dead Snow is something of a tribute.
 * A lot of critics made the mistake of thinking it was meant to be a serious film, unfortunately. Given how over-the-top the gore factor is, one wonders how they could have thought that, but as a result even some of the reviews are hilarious.
 * There is a brief argument about whether one of the characters, a Jew, would come back as one of the Nazi zombies...
 * Rockula. A vampire is cursed to experience the death of his true love (by ham bone) every 20 or so years. His mom is a nymphomaniac cougar. He courts his true love by becoming a rock star vampire. So wrong, and yet so right.
 * Good lord, man! It's a ham bone wielded by a Pirate with a rhinestone pegleg! It's all an Excuse Plot to string together a bunch of music videos amid the Cliché Storm, with a large dose of Our Vampires Are Different for spice.
 * The vampire in question also has a Vitriolic Best Buds relationship with his independent reflection (who may or may not be the ghost of Elvis). His mother is played by Toni Basil (of Hey Mickey fame), the girlfriend's manager is played by Thomas Dolby (yes, that one) who sells new-age coffins in his day job (and his advertisements are pure comedy genius) and it includes the unforgettable sight of Bo Diddley in skintight neon-yellow spandex.
 * 100 Million B.C., a Sci-Fi original movie, is so bad that it's funny. Complete with cheesy acting and special effects. The sound of time travel was the same sound effect of a Pokeball opening!
 * Twister is a goldmine of misplayed drama to the point of so-bad-it's-goodness. The iconic flying cows, bad dialogue, and the inexplicable slurping sound the tornadoes make when they retract back into the clouds.
 * The Conqueror. All you need to hear is "John Wayne is Genghis Khan" to know that this is going to be hilarious.
 * "SaaaAAAyyyy ... you're beautiful in your wrath!"
 * Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2 was made up from scenes from the original Silent Night Deadly Night and some of the most hilarious overacting of all time. Just try and watch the "Garbage Day" scene without laughing.
 * Xanadu: Olivia Newton-John is a muse who comes to visit a struggling artist (played by Michael Beck, whose career - by his own admittance - died a horrible death upon the film's release), and the two of them decide to make something timeless... a roller disco rink! Add the random-ass animated sequence and some really awesome music, and you have one of the funniest movies ever made. There's a reason it's become a cult classic.
 * And Gene Kelly showing that despite being in his eighties that he is still one of the best dancers in Hollywood.
 * Deadly Prey. A Vietnam vet gets kidnapped by garbage men stripped down to his pants and has to survive being hunted by mercenaries. Rambo meets Running man minus any sort of budget.
 * Mike Danton cuts a man's arm of and beats him around the head with his own severed limb and then finishes by scalping him.
 * The best insults are directed and the evil female such as "kiss my ass", "Bitch". And a personal favourite "Fuck You!" before knocking her out cold with one hand.
 * Mac and Me is a blatant ripoff of ET the Extraterrestrial which takes shamelessness to hitherto unexplored depths. If you thought Elliot feeding E.T. Reese's Pieces was unwarranted Product Placement...hoo boy. The aliens here require Coke to live! There's a Big Lipped Alligator Moment scene of Mac and his human companions at McDonald's...with Ronald McDonald himself appearing! For more head slamming without risk of (further) brain damage, read the Something Awful review of this POS available on the link.
 * Ron would later go on to win the Worst Newcomer Razzie for 1988 (as "Himself").
 * The 1995 film "Mosquito" with Gunnar Hansen is hands down one of the funniest movies ever made. Unfortunately, it's supposed to be a horror movie.
 * Max Knight: Ultra Spy. From unintelligible hacker speak to a climax filmed using a Half Life mod, the movie is completely terrible and completely awesome at the same time.
 * Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo. C'mon, you know it is. A ridiculously offensive blind person stereotype is able to "see" after having sex with a stereotypical black guy? And then saying "You're black?! I knew it."
 * The movie Runaway is a really bad movie set Twenty Minutes Into the Future involving Tom Selleck, Gene Simmons and acid spitting spider robots. How could you go wrong?
 * Wes Craven's Cursed 2005. Kinda tragic, considering it was supposed to be to werewolf movies what Scream was to slasher movies...
 * Lou Ferrigno as Hercules. Apollo's chariot which was a sloppily constructed chariot wrapped in aluminum foil, Zeus's thunderbolts which were hand-drawn overlays with a cheesy sound effect, scenes where a tin crown falls to the floor and dents itself because it is too flimsy to bounce while a portentous voice-over intones "and the kingdom fell", all form the perfect background to the acting (sic) of Lou Ferrigno. The only time he was even the slightest bit believable was in one scene where Cassiopeia (played by the stunning Ingrid Anderson) drops her face veil and Lou stands there dumbfounded at her beauty. Truly So Bad Its Good.
 * Shadow Man, produced and written by and starring Steven Seagal. The movie is a hilarious patchwork of badly shot exposition, cheaply done action scenes, over-the-top terrible acting and the ineffable Seagal himself, playing himself. Himself as an ultra-sexy, uber-badass, martial artist, special agent, MacGyver-esque business genius. Naturally. Not one to share the limelight, he decided against hiring decent actors. It's awesome!
 * Rave to the Grave: It's Exactly What It Says on the Tin. Spectacularly cheesy zombie rave movie? Beautifully bad acting and effects? ZOMBIE RAVES?
 * Streets of Fire. Willem Defoe looks like a vampire.
 * Big Bully. It may have Tom Arnold in it, but his character Roscoe, the eponymous bully and his gold tooth on the other hand... And the antics between him and lead character David Leary that occur as adults.
 * Baseketball.
 * A little-known gem from 1972 called "Blood Freak" is quite possibly the world's only anti-drug mutant-monster horror film with a Christian message. (I'll let you go back and read that again.) It's the saga of a Vietnam Vet who gets introduced to pot by a barely-legal cutie, gets instantly hooked, then starts a job at a local turkey farm where he is asked to eat some experimental turkey meat one day (for quality-control purposes). The hormones in the turkey meat react with the drugs in his system to turn him into a turkey-headed monster who goes on a three-block rampage, killing other addicts and drinking their blood (because, see, that's the only way he can get high now) -- but then at the end he is saved by Faith In Jesus. The production values themselves also make it look like the budget consisted of about twelve cents and a handful of pocket lint.
 * KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park. You need know nothing more than the title.
 * The 1955 film Picnic is one of the great unintentional comedies, embracing every cliche about The Fifties, highlighted by dialogue that's pure camp ("Neeeewoooolllaaah!"), a melodramatic score, and a middle-aged William Holden playing a supposed sexy drifter in his early 20s.
 * The Rage: Carrie 2. A dolled-up sequel to a horror classic, made over two decades after said movie came out in order to cash in on the success of Scream and other teen horror films in the late '90s. While it doesn't hold a candle to the original in terms of quality or tension, it makes up for this with buckets of blood (no pun intended) and every late-'90s Teen Drama/horror cliche in the books.
 * The film Killjoy is a prime example of this. A killer clown offers drugs to "gangstas" in an effort to entice them into the back of his magical ice cream truck so he can kill them when they are transported to an abandoned warehouse. The special effects are laughable, the acting is terrible, the plot is ludicrous, and the whole film is so bad it is awesome.
 * The Swinger, a 1966 vehicle for the vivacious Ann-Margret that reunites her with Bye Bye Birdie/Viva Las Vegas director George Sidney, is one of the earliest attempts at a "sexy" comedy. But it's so dated, sexist and kitschy it winds up being the rarest of cinematic beasts: a comedy that's only funny when it's not trying to be.
 * G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra. It looked like they just stuck their arm in the Trope Bag, and then tried to make the cheesiest version possible of everything they pulled out. (Defrosting Ice Queen, Instant Awesome, Just Add Ninja, Everything's Better with Spinning, Powered Armor, Slave Mooks, Grey Goo, Guns Are Worthless, Dark Chick...)
 * The Italian masterpiece: "La croce dalle sette pietre" (The Seven Stones Cross), commonly known as: "L'uomo lupo contro la Camorra", which means "The Werewolf versus the Mafia" (Camorra is a specific, localized kind of Mafia). Yeah, that's right. It was (poorly) funded by exploiting a loophole in the Government policies, which financially encouraged those creative works highlighting the Mafia problem. The same guy was director, writer and protagonist actor, so you know exactly who to blame for this sequence and this one (the language is for the most part irrelevant). The movie got a small but devoted group of amused fans, which caused the author to be regularly invited to a lot of trash movies conventions in Italy. His own "fans" then proceed to systematically and brutally mock his movie. Poor bastard.
 * Dead Heat is the best 80s zombie buddy cop action horror comedy you will ever see. A cop investigating jewelry store heists (performed by zombies) is killed and brought back from the dead and has 12 hours before he melts into goo. His partner is Joe Piscopo whose entire existence is dedicated to terrible one-liners. They Fight Crime. It also includes bad acting, obvious continuity errors, a plot that makes little sense and reanimated Chinese food.
 * The Pakistani movie International Guerrillas. It shows the story of three Pakistani guys who, after seeing how one of their relatives is killed by the police during the demonstrations against Salman Rushdie's Satanic Verses, decided to go and murder the famous writer. The movie becomes a cat and mouse game, with the guerrillas being always a few seconds too late, allowing Rushdie to run away while they are stuck fighting his armies of thugs. With some (hilariously bad) Bollywood dance segments in between. And a bunch of cut and paste action sequences (more like copy and paste, since all the sequences play at least three times before moving on to the following one). Finally, Rushdie catches the protagonists, but suddenly a literal Deus Ex Machina (a flying Ku'ran, symbolizing Allah) appears to save the 'heroes' and kill Rushdie with some Dramatic Thunder. All in glorious VHS quality. It has to be seen to be believed.
 * Watch the final scene here. Words, there are none.
 * Would it be out of line to say Bollywood - particularly Bollywood action flicks - just runs on this trope?
 * The Gag Dub movie Kung Pow is so profoundly, mind-bogglingly idiotic it's hilarious with the right mindset. Others will just hate it.
 * The Marine, starring John Cena, has a pretty generic action plot and decent special effects. It could probably be considered So Okay It's Average were it not for the hilarious acting of Cena and Robert Patrick (who is fully aware what kind of movie he is in and earns his pay) as the crime boss. The supporting cast is equally hilarious and the dialogue?


 * Special mention goes out to the scene where the Big Bad threatens at gunpoint the hostage who's currently piloting the helicopter they're both sitting in hundreds of feet above the street. (note that the reason she's flying it, is because he doesn't know how)
 * If the YouTube comments are any indication, the "educational" film Unarius The Arrival put out by Unarius Academy of Science (a space cult) is this. The sparkly special effects and goofy costumes of the then-cult leader Uriel (Ruth E. Norman) are fun to look at, the spaceships are actually kinda cool, and it's often hilariously cheesy. A great film to snark at that probably won't make you want to chew your own arm off to get away from.
 * The film Zombi 7 (also known as Zombie '90: Extreme Pestilence), made by The Violent Shitters of Violent Shit fame has over the top low budget German Gorn combined with some So Unfunny It's Funny English dubbing that it saves the film from entering Violent Shit's territory. You can trust The Cinema Snob about this film with his great review here.
 * Space Marines a 1996 film with warp effects stolen from Babylon 5, a grenade blast that launches a mook like a rocket and space pirates with eye patches and AK-47s. Has John Pyper-Ferguson of Caprica as an over the top villain looking like a confederate officer with a handlebar mustache, goatee and a habit of recording himself then playing it back. Glorious.
 * Bloody Mallory is a french "horror" flick about a woman trying to save the pope from demons. She does such with a transvestite, a government agent and a mute telepathic girl who has a mind battle with one of the enemies, complete with over the top music and intense staring. Mallory's dead demon husband shows up here and the entire English dub is on par with the Godzilla dubs.
 * Ninja Assassin: A glorious example of martial arts cinema, complete with Ludicrous Gibs, nonsensical backstories about warring ninja clans, overdramatic angst, a fight in a laundromat that ends with a girl's severed head in a washing machine, and immortal dialogue such as "Plants don't have hearts." "Everything has a heart." "I don't."
 * Cobra. It's a Cliché Storm starring Sylvester Stallone using every single trope from Dirty Harry and the renegade cop films it inspired. Cowboy Cop main character with an endless stream of one liners who's called in to do the dirty work? Cobra is the trope image. Ethnic sidekick who gets injured in the line of duty? Check. Overbearing chief who insists upon doing things by the book? Check. Antagonizing fellow cop who has the audacity to stand up for the criminals rights? Check. Love interest caught up in the case but otherwise useless? Check. Ax Crazy serial killer villian? Check. Car chases, gun fights, explosions, and a final fight in a steam factory with No OSHA Compliance? Very check. Just watch the opening action sequence.
 * The Core. As Roger Ebert puts it: "I have such an unreasonable affection for this movie, indeed, that it is only by slapping myself alongside the head and drinking black coffee that I can restrain myself from recommending it."
 * RoboCop 3 is quite substandard when compared to its previous entries, but when taken by itself, the film is hilarious. A Japanese competitor of OCP's sends over robot ninjas to stop Robocop, a 9-year old girl uses a computer terminal to hack an ED-209 unit and there's Special Effect Failure galore. Add to that unintentionally funny moments (including Robo commandeering a pimp's car (complete with reaction shot), a man's suicide is played for comedy, a children's tricycle being used for barricade material, Robocop flying in on a jetpack and two robots who simultaneously cut each other's heads off) and script howlers ("Come and get me, Mr. Robocop!", "Oh my God, Johnson, our stocks have dropped to nothing!", "You got a ghost cop? A vampire cop?" and Robo's immortal line "Don't count on it, chum!"), along with a score that makes these moments epic, and you've got the perfect storm for SBIG. And Jill Hennessy as eye candy.
 * Fahrenheit 451 struggled to have anything to do with the book, instead focusing on a romance that didn't have much to do with the rest of the plot, which alone would have made it just sort of bad, or even possibly okay. Add in the special effects, though, particularly the amazing jetpack rivercrossing scene towards the end, and it suddenly becomes hilarious.
 * While Titanic is a good film, the alternate ending is extremely heavy-handed and unintentionally amusing.
 * Deadfall, a trashy 1993 noir/comedy film that would be terrible if not for Nicolas Cage's hilarious overacting. His delicious Ham and Cheese performance is considered to be among his best performances not to be taken seriously. See here and here to see just how bad the acting is.
 * Laser Mission
 * Thankskilling is intentionally terrible. It was clearly made by someone that loves the classic slashers, but was wondering the same thing everyone else was: "Why isn't there a Thanksgiving slasher?"
 * Both of Robert Rodriguez's latter two kids' flicks falls squarely in here:
 * Spy Kids 3D: Game Over. The first two Spy Kids films were fun if simplistic kids' action movies. This one, however, was simply the pits. It features lazy 3D effects, an unlikeable-to-the-point-of-absurdity supporting cast (the only one who isn't a Jerkass is the protagonist's girlfriend, who bizarrely ), Plot Coupons appearing out of nowhere, toads on pogo sticks, giant robot monkeys, a cowboy branding a giant robot monkey, Ricardo Montalban in Powered Armor, Elijah Wood appearing out of nowhere just to die, Sylvester Stallone as a Mad Scientist, and a very unfortunate hairstyle from Daryl Sabara. And there is a fourth one (yet without Sabara and Vega, due to them getting too old.)
 * But that one was peanuts compared to The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl, starring a pre-Twilight Taylor Lautner. Based on Rodriguez's son's dreams, it contains cookie giants, bad CG slime, a planet named "Drool," The Dragon being George Lopez as a giant evil lightbulb, and the Narmtacular line "I'm King of the Ocean."
 * Ninja Terminator. Richard Harrison communicating with the Ninja Empire via a Garfield phone. "I must reform the Ninja Empire!"
 * While the film itself has more than a few unironic fans and thus doesn't really belong here, there are probably very few who would dispute the inclusion of Hayden Christensen's acting in Attack of the Clones on this page.
 * Netforce features the most horrible technical jargon and computer mumbo-jumbo a script writer can come up with while maintaining a high degree of Critical Research Failure of how computers, the internet and hacking works. And just like a big rig collision on the information superway, it's impossible to look away!
 * Bruno Mattei's Hell of the Living Dead. Have you ever imagined something more ridiculous than a soldier deciding while there are zombies all over the place to put on a tutu and a bowler hat before singing "I'm singing in the rain" ? Have you ever imagined somebody actually thinking "yeah, no problem, let's put this in our movie !" nonetheless ?
 * Xtro II: The Second Encounter is a low-budget 1990 Canadian film that shamelessly rips off Alien. Poor special effects, over-the-top acting, and a melodramatic score somehow combine to make Narm Charm rather than straight-up Narm. Extra amusing for anyone who's ever watched The X-Files, as among the cast is a very young Nicholas Lea, who would go on to play recurring bad guy Alex Krycek. The Totally Radical dialogue and Eighties Hair just make it even funnier.
 * Only a trailer has been released, but the film "2016" looks to embody this. The plot appears to revolve around two Xenomorphs who arrive in the African nation of Ghana, where they throw cars on women, kick babies into the sky, and perform kung-fu kicks on innocent pedestrians, while a guy keeps yelling, "Twenty Sixteen!" every five seconds. Oh yeah, and the T-800 shows up for some reason. The whole thing appears to have been made on a budget of ten dollars, and filmed on a street. See it for yourself here
 * For that matter, any trailer made by these guys seems to fit this trope, with poor CGI graphics, hilarious images (a lion leaping into a woman's belly, a disembodied hammer smacking people in the head, a cat leaping out of the Grim Reaper's mouth etc.) and a wildly enthusiastic guy shouting the title of the respective film every five seconds.
 * Starballz is probably the worst animated porn film ever made but it is incredibly hilarious. The dubbing is bad, the animation is bad, the dialogue is... astonding but it is absolutely hilarious. Especially since you can make a brain-killing drinking game by naming all the references.
 * Cool as Ice, which can best be described as 'The Room...with Vanilla Ice'.
 * 3 Dev Adam (3 Mighty Men). A Turkish superhero ripoff in the vein of Turkish Star Wars, it stars an inexplicably Turkish Captain America and a Turk- err, Mexican masked wrestler teaming up against a potbellied Complete Monster version of Spider-Man with Big Ol' Eyebrows. It must be seen to be believed.
 * The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat. Filled with Deranged Animation, Hitler as a dog, and such genius dialogue as "Jesus Christ, Lucifer's a faggot!", it must be seen to be believed. Also the first one, with all the animal sex and the black stereotype crows.
 * Death Bed: The Bed That Eats. It must be seen to be believed.
 * Book Of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 makes no sense, has nothing to do with the original, has unlikable characters and a tonne of unanswered questions. However, there's something oddly... charming about it.
 * Back in the 90s Archie Comics made a Made for TV movie based on the cartoon named Archie: To Riverdale and Back Again. One of the scenes features a middle aged Jughead attempting to dance to hiphop.. It's as awkward as you'd expect.
 * Eegah is this, even without Mystery Science Theater 3000, it's still hilarious, like plan 9, but with Jaws as a caveman.
 * Most certainly The Boondock Saints, with the OTT performance from Willem Dafoe and the Cluster F-Bombs and all.