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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsIn your opinion, what is the most overrated movie/movies?
Last edited Thu Jan 29, 2026, 09:51 AM - Edit history (1)
underpants
(195,411 posts)The Ten Commandments is laughably bad.
Scarlett has to be way up there in terms of irritating obnoxious and insufferable characters
mwmisses4289
(3,467 posts)it was an awful movie based on a badly written book. Glad I'm not the only one who thinks the movie was awful.
debm55
(57,261 posts)BootinUp
(51,014 posts)I always that Speed with Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock was quite over hyped for a poorly conceived movie. The bus cannot slow down or it blows up and it did not blow up? Get outa here. lol.
debm55
(57,261 posts)DBoon
(24,815 posts)Come on, you are lucky to go 20 mph on the rush hour I-10
I imagine an alternate ending where the bus goes through decades of service where the bomb is never activated. The bus ends up in a scrap yard where an employee decides to take it for one last spin. BOOM!
BootinUp
(51,014 posts)PJMcK
(24,855 posts)A confusing mess of a story that essentially ends with, And then I woke up.
Academy award for Best Picture? No, thanks.
debm55
(57,261 posts)BlueWaveNeverEnd
(13,265 posts)The time travel stuff was too complicated
rubbersole
(11,072 posts)Propaganda never plays well.
debm55
(57,261 posts)mwmisses4289
(3,467 posts)Just put you to sleep boring.
Disney's The Incredibles.
debm55
(57,261 posts)QueerDuck
(1,168 posts)debm55
(57,261 posts)ProfessorGAC
(76,044 posts)Others mentioned some on my overrated list, but only GWTW comes close to as overrated as Cameron's piece of flotsam.
My wife and I were laughing out loud in the theater and couldn't stop, so we walked out before me upset the drones who thought it was good.
Tried again when it hit HBO. Same result.
Laughably bad.
justaprogressive
(6,435 posts)thanks!
debm55
(57,261 posts)AllaN01Bear
(28,790 posts)debm55
(57,261 posts)ProfessorGAC
(76,044 posts)The characters were all cartoons.
AllaN01Bear
(28,790 posts)ProfessorGAC
(76,044 posts)Won a thousand Academy Awards, too.
Another thing Night To Remember had in its favor is that it was an hour & ten minutes shorter!
debm55
(57,261 posts)ProfessorGAC
(76,044 posts)...to those that loved the movie was to remind them Rose killed Jack.
If she gets in the lifeboat like he asked her to, he would have been on the door. He spotted the floating door & she survived perched on it. So, if she's in the lifeboat, he's on the door & they both survive.
You wouldn't believe the illogical games the fans played to try to explain away that simple observation.
debm55
(57,261 posts)NNadir
(37,459 posts)...being killed by hypothermia, and yet, the awful movie was hyped for its "realism."
the_liberal_grandpa
(278 posts)Complete waste of time.
debm55
(57,261 posts)Dear_Prudence
(1,084 posts)I was in high school and saw the movie in the theater 2 1/2 times (late for one showing) with dates. I was into sci fi books back then (Dune, Stranger in a Strange Land, Fail Safe) but I had no idea what was going on in that movie. Maybe the movie would have seemed more enjoyable without the awful dates? But I really liked the homage to the movie at the beginning of "Barbie."
debm55
(57,261 posts)Orange. I didn't like it.
Deep State Witch
(12,636 posts)If you consumed some form of mind-altering substance before it. Because it made no fucking sense otherwise.
Dear_Prudence
(1,084 posts)All I had was buttered popcorn. 😭
catbyte
(38,776 posts)I detest them all and they're overrated, IMHO.
Like Elaine in Seinfeld, The English Patient really grinds my gears for some reason.
debm55
(57,261 posts)LogDog75
(1,145 posts)It was so boooring I walked out of it before it was half over.
debm55
(57,261 posts)Cirsium
(3,523 posts)Also, the South African propaganda film "The Gods Must Be Crazy" was especially disgusting, and Titanic was just awful. "Jack Jack! Jack!" Good grief.
Speaking of bad films, why is it that decent versions of any of Thomas Hardy's novels can never be made?
debm55
(57,261 posts)direction.
Cirsium
(3,523 posts)It is a romanticization of apartheid, produced by the South African government.
debm55
(57,261 posts)Submariner
(13,270 posts)I was ready for a happy fun puppy movie with a typical goofy Labrador dog, and was sorely crushed with the ending. Boy did it ever suk.
A little voice was asking me "WTF are you watching a Jennifer Aston movie for", but being a sucker for pets I watched and regret it.
debm55
(57,261 posts)boonecreek
(1,418 posts)Or anything else by Michael Bay.
debm55
(57,261 posts)boonecreek
airplaneman
(1,381 posts)Although the blight idea was kind of interesting the movie was slow boring and not believable. NASA as the world is dying they just happen to have a spare rocket.
-Airplane
debm55
(57,261 posts)Coventina
(29,404 posts)I have my kevlar undies on!
debm55
(57,261 posts)But it was a Civil War soap opera. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, I agree with you. Citizen Kane------the only thing I even remember for it was ROSEBUD being the sled. It was show in my college Humanities class. The rest of those two movies were not memorable to me. Two out of three were forgettable, my friend. It's the first one with the story and the color in the second half made it memorable to me. Sorry for my ramble. Thank you Coventina for sharing.
Coventina
(29,404 posts)They treat the whole thing as "just a dream" and I really hated that.
Plus, nothing in the movie matched what I had imagined in my head from reading the books.
Regarding "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory": It horrified me as a kid. Sure, I hate bratty kids, but I don't feel they deserve the death penalty! Geez!
Citizen Kane was a movie I also watched in college!
I get that it was a cautionary tale about the delusions that wealth brings.....but somehow it just didn't move me.
debm55
(57,261 posts)duckworth969
(1,284 posts)Overrated and not really cute. I find Spielberg pretentious.
debm55
(57,261 posts)RandySF
(81,828 posts)ET
Top Gun
Titanic (I fell asleep)
2001: A Space Odyssey
Midnight Cowboy
Forrest Gump
Gone With The Wind
debm55
(57,261 posts)RandySF
(81,828 posts)debm55
(57,261 posts)see it. Thanks , RandySF.
Permanut
(8,095 posts)Nicholas Cage acts drunk through the entire movie, and wins an Oscar.
debm55
(57,261 posts)have been weak. . Thank you Permanut.
Permanut
(8,095 posts)I was bummed that Richard Dreyfuss didn't win for Mr. Holland's Opus. I was an extra as a teacher in that movie. Great fun, got to work with Richard Dreyfuss, Jay Thomas (RIP), and Elizabeth Boyd.
Celerity
(53,946 posts)Perfect examples: Annie Hall and Manhattan.
Coventina
(29,404 posts)However, I still do love "Play it Again Sam" and "Broadway Danny Rose."
They both make me laugh, and I just have such a good time watching them.
(My feeble excuse is that his crimes were way in the future?)
Celerity
(53,946 posts)Example:
Hard to Be a God (2013)
Critical response
Reception in the Russian media was mixed. While some critics praised German's vision, others, especially in sci-fi themed media, were critical of his handling of source material.
However, Hard to Be a God received acclaim from English-language critics. Review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes reports that 95% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 42 reviews with an average rating of 9/10. The site's consensus reads: "A sci-fi epic with palpable connections to the present, Hard to Be a God caps director Aleksei German's brilliant filmography with a final masterpiece". Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, reports the film has a score of 93 based on 13 reviews.
Peter Bradshaw in The Guardian newspaper gave it five out of five, calling it: "awe-inspiring in its own monumentally mad way" and "beautiful, brilliant and bizarre". Ignatiy Vishnevetsky of The A.V. Club likened it to Orson Welles' Chimes at Midnight, naming German as "probably the most important Russian filmmaker to remain more or less completely unknown in the United States." He praised the "grotesque and deranged" medieval sci-fi film as "first and foremost a vision of human misery, brutality, and ignorance." The location manager and sometimes film blogger Shane Scott-Travis included the film in his list "25 most beautiful films of the 21st century" (ranking it the 17th) in the website of film bloggers Taste of Cinema.

Hard to Be a God (Aleksei German)
https://www.sensesofcinema.com/2017/soviet-cinema/hard-to-be-a-god/
Hope in Despair, and Beauty in Revulsion: Trudno byt bogom (Aleksei German, 2013)
Labeled as one of the biggest perfectionists among his peers, Russian film director Aleksei Yuryevich German is one of the most significant and influential figures in the history of the Soviet cinema of the late 20th century. Uncompromising and innovative throughout his career, German, in his philosophically rigorous works, kept testing the potentialities of film aesthetics to grapple with the conundrums of the collective psyche, vanishing memories, and ethical dilemmas and paradoxes of the totalitarian regime. Due not only to the multiple obstacles created by Soviet censorship, but also to his now legendary slow and laborious work methods, the Russian director created only five thematically and aesthetically distinctive films. Trudno byt bogom (Hard to Be a God, 2013) can be regarded as his magnum opus.
German first began thinking about an adaptation of the well-known science-fiction novel under the same title written by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky even prior to his directorial debut with Proverka na Dorogakh (Trial on the Road, 1968). Having started to develop a script (in consultation with Boris Strugatsky) in the late 1960s, he had to abandon the project because of the toughened censorship apparatus in the aftermath of the deteriorating political situation after Russias invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968. Soviet censors considered the project politically inappropriate. It took two decades, before Hard to be a God went into production again, only to be interrupted once more by the major political changes marked by the collapse of the Communist system and democratisation of Russia as well as Germans hesitations after he learned of a filmic adaptation of the Strugatsky brothers novel being undertaken by another filmmaker, Peter Fleischmann. German returned to the project in 2000 and worked on the film till the end of his life. Sadly, the director passed away in 2013, before completing the final stages of sound editing. It was then that Germans family membershis widow and creative partner Svetlana Karmalita as well as his son, film director Aleksei German Jr.finalised the post-production process posthumously.
A plot of Hard to be a God appears to be rather distinct from Germans previous films. Whereas all his earlier films were set in Soviet Russia, the action of Hard to be a God takes place in Arkanar, an imaginary Earth-like planet whose inhabitants recall terrestrials before they had advanced to the Renaissance era. The principle character is a historian, played here by Russian comedian and popular TV host Leonid Yarmolnik, one of a group of people sent from the future planet Earth for an undercover operation to inspect the development of Arkanars medieval society. He disguises his earthly origins by acquiring an alien identity: Don Rumata, an illegitimate son of Goran, a local pagan god who was born from the gods mouth..
In order to succeed, the visitors must assimilate with the local barbarians, and thus, they are strictly prohibited from using their advanced skills and superior knowledge as this might alter the natural development of the planets history. The present of Arkanar is determined by a rising authoritarian regime, referred to as the Greys and ruled by Don Reba, who leads a ruthless campaign against educated people. Eventually, enraged by the Greys killing of his lover Ari, Rumata breaks the rules of conduct and launches a pitiless massacre, only to find out that after the Greys have been defeated, the Blacks, an even more oppressive and belligerent religious group, take power.
snip
Coventina
(29,404 posts)I know that's a personal failing on my part!
I'm just no good when it comes to that.
I tried to watch Andrei Rublev once, and I can say I know it's a great film, but I couldn't finish it.
I'm just such a wimp.
debm55
(57,261 posts)steps. is a masterpiece. Hitchcock borrowed some of his film techniques for his film. Takes place in the Ukraine during the Russian Revolution. Troops are sent in by the czar. It's on You Tube. First saw in my Humanities class.
Coventina
(29,404 posts)I have seen the Odessa Steps sequence, in the same class I saw Citizen Kane, actually!
I will have to sit down and watch the entire film someday.
I know it's a masterpiece, and I might be able to handle it....
debm55
(57,261 posts)on the steps and land.
debm55
(57,261 posts)Celerity
(53,946 posts)RandySF
(81,828 posts)debm55
(57,261 posts)have chosen another actor. Thanks, RandySF.