Sunday, December 11, 2011

Movies I Hate That You (Probably) Love

We all have them: that list of acclaimed films that everyone seems to love but us. Maybe we can’t fully articulate why we hate these otherwise renowned films. Maybe hype ruined them for us, maybe our issues with specific genres promote our negative acknowledgement. Or maybe, just maybe, we simply don’t like them because… we just don’t like them.

The films below are movies that I cannot stand. They’re all popular, Oscar-friendly hits that generated as much critical praise as commercial recognition. Me? I think they’re better off not mentioned than mentioned at all. I’ve seen every film on this list multiple times, because to bash a classic, I think it’s important to understand why you hate it. Basically, I’ve given these movies a fair, unbiased shot, and they simply do not do it for me.

By all means, let chaos ensue in the comments section by bashing my bashes, and, of course, telling me which popular movies you detest.

Movies I Hate That You (Probably) Love
It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)
The term “Capracorn” is something I understand and appreciate all too well. Most of the time, the term is used as an endearment to describe the positive sentiment associated with most Frank Capra films. For me, it describes the ungodly corniness of the majority of his movies, It’s a Wonderful Life being the chief example.

The film is so undeterred in its every-little-thing-is-gonna-be-all-right sentimentality that it makes me want to puke. It probably doesn’t help that when James Stewart wasn’t being directed by John Ford or Alfred Hitchcock, he was a one note actor of less-than-limited range (but that’s cause for a different post).

Mind you, I don’t consider all Capra to be crap, I quite enjoyed It Happened One Night and You Can’t Take it With You, It’s a Wonderful Life, however, is heavy-handed didacticism at its absolute best. Which is meant as a grand insult.

Musicals/Epics from the ‘50s and ‘60s (1951-1964)
Sure, musicals aren’t my thing, and I don’t typically take a shine to overblown epics, but there are a slew of Best Picture winners from the ‘50s and ‘60s that I think are just laughably awful.  

An American in Paris, The Greatest Show on Earth, Around the World in 80 Days, Gigi, My Fair Lady (to name a few): hate ‘em all. While I appreciate the effort that went into the musical numbers and elaborate action sequences, those scenes are not enough to justify these films. Content matters, and aside from their epic scale, these movies have next to none of it.

Also, Audrey Hepburn’s accent in My Fair Lady is arguably the worst voice inflections ever attempted for a film. There’s a reason she wasn’t nominated for her performance.

The Indiana Jones Films (1981-1989)
To be fair, as a cinephile, it’s impossible to not appreciate (if ever so slightly) some of what is achieved in Raiders of the Lost Ark. The opening scene, the nonchalant shootout; that’s all fine and well, but for the most part, I am completely unmoved by these films.

When I profiled Steven Spielberg, I said that in the many times I’ve forced myself to watch the Indy films, I found myself counting the minutes until they were done, and that really is the best way for me to put it.

Raiders of the Lost Ark can have an indifferent pass, but Temple of Doom and The Last Crusade… hated ‘em then, hate ‘em now. At least we can all agree that Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was goddamn bloody awful, right?

Braveheart (1995)
I get it, Mel wanted to assert himself as a serious director, capable of telling sweeping stories with a nostalgia reminiscent of Ben-Hur, but good god, how much can you possibly shove down our throats? The awful accents, the fake labored love, the rape, the endless talking, the cookie-cutter acting, the forced ending; give me a break.

The battle scenes are impressive, but at just under three hours, I can watch this movie in fast forward and get just as much out of it. Probably not a good thing that the whole “FREEEEDOM!” bit makes me laugh hysterically. Moving on.

Gladiator (2000)
There’s obviously a trend going on here. It’s no secret that epic warrior films are a genre that I have little to no interest in. Now, like most every other film on this list, Gladiator has noble feats worth mentioning. Its opening battle is huge and extraordinary, and its coliseum fights (especially the chariot sequence) are astonishing, but that’s what, 20 minutes? I’m more than willing to give credit where credit is due, and I also have no problem calling out faults.

I’ve liked Russell Crowe in a handful of films, but mostly, the guy doesn’t do it for me. Aside from the impressive physicality that’s demanded of him, I think his performance in Gladiator is a series of laughable clichés and moments of monumental hyperbolic grandstanding. Everything he says and does is forced and inadequate. I wasn’t surprised that he won the Best Actor Oscar (an awards competition that is as political as most presidential elections), but his win only made me like the movie less.

The Lord of the Rings Trilogy (2001-2003)
So far, I’ve tried to point out aspects I appreciate from the films on this list. The Lord of the Rings trilogy, however, will garner no such praise from me. I hate each of these films with a burning passion. They are exaggerated, incoherent pieces of garbage that I wish I had never seen. Here’s why.

When I saw The Fellowship of the Ring in theaters, I sat baffled and pissed when the film “ended.” As if Elijah Wood uttering a few words and fading to black is a suitable way to end a movie. What happened to making every film in a saga its own? If the LOTR films are meant to be seen as one fluid piece of cinema, then release a nine hour movie. More on this in a bit.

The Two Towers, by far the worst film in the series, represents the only time I have ever walked out of a movie theater. I sat there for nearly two hours, completely unaware of anything that was going on, and instead of continuing to play catch-up, I salvaged my night by walking out. (For the record, I later watched the film in its entirety in the theater. I was far more bored the second time.)

And then there’s the Oscar-sweeping Return of the King, which is orgasmic bread and butter for fans, but for me, is an egregious waste of time that I prayed would end hours sooner than it did. 
Now, when I bitch and moan about these films to fans, I’m often met with two key arguments. One: if I read the books, I’d appreciate and understand the films more. I’m sorry, but that is utter nonsense. I have seen and loved hundreds of films based on books without reading their source material. A book should in no way be a prerequisite for a movie. A film is a film, and it should stand on its own.

Two: the films are meant to be viewed as one, not as three distinct films. Again, nonsense. By that rationale, every trilogy or film series can only be best appreciated on an all-encompassing basis. I can name you dozens of films that stand fine on their own, and do not need the other movies in their respective series' to complete their stories.

I watched every LOTR film in the theater and, years later, was convinced by a friend to watch them all on DVD. I was glad I did, because it made my argument stronger. As much as I tried to like them a fraction of how much everyone else seems to, they simply do not do it for me, and they certainly never will.

Be sure to tell me what popular movies you loathe in the comments section. Have at it.

38 comments:

  1. It's a shame Capra is remembered for the overly sentimental It's a Wonderful Life (which, admittedly, was made right after him and Stewart got back from World War II, making its pleasantries understandable if not still a bit grating). So many of his films are so bitter and funny like Mr. Deeds and Meet John Doe that it's a shame that that one gets lauded while his other stuff is ignored.

    I don't necessarily agree with you on a couple of these (You don't like Indy? Wow.), but your complaints about Lord of the Rings are pretty spot on. Well made, but barely cliff notes that only work for people who love the books.

    Oh, and for personal hatred, I'd have to go with Star Wars (all of 'em), Leon: The Professional, non-Kubrick comedies made in the late 1960's, and the unbelievably awful Toy Story 3. Such a let down.

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  2. What a brilliant post! I agree with all of your choices! I hate all those movies that I've seen that you listed. Some movies I loathe that others love are THE USUAL SUSPECTS, CRASH (2005), STAR WARS, PAN'S LABYRINTH, THE DARK KNIGHT (don't hate it, but don't love it either), and pretty much any movie based on a comic book or "graphic novel."

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  3. To me LOTR is one of the few recent trilogies to maintain its qualities through all 3 movies. But you have the right to your opinion, and i'm not doing to bash you for yours.

    As for, the closest i've come to hating a well regarded film is 2001. I don't actually hate it, but i personally found it far too "arty" for my tastes. It is my least favorite Kubrick film.

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  4. I'm with you on Indy (apart from Last Crusade) and Braveheart. I can sort of see why people love them but I think you're spot on. I'd put the Harry Potter films on my list, I know they're for kids but....

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    1. harry potter will always be a legend and the best movie/book series of all time,better than lord of the rings

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    2. I always love hearing fans of both those franchises debating which is better.

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  5. Daring move, mister Alex:) but I do agree with the Lord of the Rings part- I really don't understand what the fuss was all about; too big and long for my taste! Although I really liked Viggo Morgenstern and Orlando Bloom, but they weren't used too much. Interesting list!

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  6. @Danny While we don’t agree on Indy, I’m oh so very glad we can come together in our aversion to Star Wars (Empire is okay, I can do without the others), and Toy Story 3, which I still, for the life of me, do not understand all the fuss. You and I are going to get along fine just fine.

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  7. @Tyler Thanks man! As for your choices, Crash did it for me when it came out, but now I’m not quite sure why I initially liked it so much, and Star Wars is blah. Love the other ones though.

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  8. @dirtywithclass Hey thanks for stopping by. 2001 is in my top 5 of all time, but like you say, everyone has a right to their opinion. That’s a very progressive way of thinking, by the way. Many people think that, because you don’t agree with them, then you are wrong. In the States, these people are most often referred to as “Republicans”

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  9. @Pete The second Harry Potter film marks the only time I have ever fallen asleep during a movie in the theater. Hated the first one, didn’t make it through the second, haven't seen any since. I thought about putting them on the list, but then I’d have to sit through the rest, which ain’t gonna happen. Thanks for commenting!

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  10. @Aziza Thanks ;) I like Viggo too, I think he’s turned into a great actor. But that doesn’t make me want to sit through the LOTR movies by again by any means

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  11. @Alex Withrow

    What I don't understand is why would you lose your time yet again with the three movies to see them on DVD if you didn't like them the first time? especially since they are sooo long

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  12. @Aziza I've seen each of them twice. I only watched them for a second time to make sure that I did indeed hate them. Twice was enough. Never again.

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  13. I was waiting for the HP series too.

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  14. Well, as much as I enjoy films like the Lord of the Rings trilogy, My Fair Lady, the Indiana Jones trilogy (last film doesn't count), and Braveheart.

    I never really cared for It's a Wonderful Life while I haven't seen a lot of the musicals of the 50s/60s to really say anything about it.

    As for Gladiator, sure it's got some nice action moments but it's not that great of a film. I found the story to be boring and not very involving. I liked Russell Crowe but wait a minute. Didn't he win Best Actor for A Beautiful Mind? Man, that movie sucked. That was a period where I really didn't like Russell Crowe very much. Not to mention that his music is fucking shite.

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  15. @Evan Not worth writing about, good or bad.

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  16. @thevoid99 Glad we agree to dislike It's a Wonderful Life, that's a start!

    Crowe was nominated three years in a row, for The Insider, Gladiator, and A Beautiful Mind. He won for Gladiator (despite his performance being the fifth best among the nominees), but lost to Kevin Spacey in '99, and Denzel Washington in '01.

    And, yeah, I think A Beautiful Mind sucked too. Never bothered to listen to his tunes, but I'm oddly pleased to hear that they are crap.

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  17. I am with you on Indiana Jones. All others except LOTR, They are kind of Ok. I Love LOTR but I was LOTR fan even before movies. I read the book way before watching them. As for myself, I do not hate them but I do not get appeal for Citizen Kane, Blue Velvet, Almost every Kubrick movie I have seen except Clockwork, Trainspotting and Slumdog too.

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  18. What about "The Sound of Music"? I never tire of watching it but maybe it comes under the muscial category that Alex mentioned. And, I should say that liberals, i.e. Dems are sometimes also categorized as being somewhat "closed". I just couldn't let that pass...ha ha. Thought that Indiana Jones, Rings, Braveheart, Harry Potter, the musicals were not my style.

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  19. @SDG Interesting choices. Slumdog is a lot like Paul Haggis' Crash, when I first saw it, I was completely taken with it. Now... it's okay.

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  20. @Unknown Sound of Music I actually like, mostly because of Christopher Plummer.

    Fair enough about the Dems, I was just trying to be silly, I'm actually not political at all. Glad to hear you don't like most of the flicks on the list!

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  21. The type of films you disliking are rather consistent: sweeping epics set in another time.

    I don't care for Braveheart or Gladiator or the Indiana Jones series.

    "It's A Wonderful Life" though is great - and within its sentimentality comes some real emotion. Not didactic in the least.

    As for the musics, not much I can argue - not the biggest fan. Especially West Side Story.

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  22. @Sam Fragoso Yeah that's what I meant about the trend in my distaste for warrior epics. Definitely not my preferred genre.

    I suppose It's a Wonderful Life is to me what Mean Streets is to you (and Rebel Without a Cause) ;-)

    I actually don't mind West Side Story that much. Not crazy about it either, though.

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  23. Gladiator was a good flick brah.

    My votes:

    Gangs of New York
    Titanic
    Chicago
    Pearl Harbor
    Gran Torino
    Evictus
    Scarface
    Juno
    Cast Away
    English Patient
    Boondock Saints
    Donnie Darko
    Full Metal Jacket

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  24. @Brent Shiiit, give me Bill the Butcher over Maximius Whatever The Hell any day of the week. (But Leo does suck in GoNY.

    Nice choices (especially Boondock Saints... never understood why people love that so much), but I certainly hope most people don't like Pearl Harbor. Barf.

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  25. @Alex Withrow
    To Tell you the truth, I really have a problem the way it Portrays India. I can be liberal but not when it smacks on your face in almost every other frame. You either have to be incredibly stupid or extremely ignorant. And Citizen Kane, that was so much about Rosebud that by the end I didn't care about it. Oh Yeah, And I love Sound of Music and because of Audrey Hepburn, don't mind My Fair Lady much. And I hate Star Wars too. :)

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  26. @SDG I have a few friends from India, and they all hate Slumdog for that exact reason, which is very interesting to me.

    I think a lot of people agree with you that the end of Citizen Kane is a cop out (I'm not one of them, but to each his own).

    Seriously loving all of this Star Wars hate!

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  27. Gangs was watchable because of Daniel Day Lewis, but it certainly didn't deserve 10 Academy Award Nominations that year.

    I mean Jay-Z sampled Gladiator in the Black Album. In JAY-Z we trust. Haha. But I thought it was entertaining and the fight scenes were pretty cool. Traffic was a much better film that year and should've won for best picture.

    Boondock Saints was a horrible film. I didn't even get through it. Horrendous acting and abysmal story. I remember everyone in college saying it was so good, a cult classic. Hmm. Not really.

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  28. @Brent The fights in Gladiator are legit, but right, Traffic FTW, and Crowe for the loss.

    I was at a party on Saturday and on the living room walls were posters for Pulp (nice), The Dark Knight (okay), Fight Club (obvious) and Boondock Saints, and I said under my breath, "What a dumb fuckin' movie." The dude who lived there heard me. He wasn't pleased.

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  29. Very interesting post here. I completelyy agree with Braveheart, Gladiator, Indiana Jones and all but the last LOTR. Now...It's a Wonderful Life is one of the classics for me.Why? Probably because of being old enough to remember when businesses offered credit to customers simply on a handshake; when school dances were regularly held for fun, etc. etc. etc....yeah yeah all the old stuff. It makes the movie special for me though. Life wasn't necessarily better then, just a little different. Musicals...hmmm. In those days musicals were the closest thing to special effects when you went to the movies. You got three stations on tv so a good set-filled musical was a release and escape. Yep, they are dated, lousy dialog, but I still like most of them.

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  30. @Mark All good arguments, pops, all good indeed.

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  31. Both Indy and LOTR, man you are killing me :) In all seriousness, I can see how the films listed could rub you the wrong way. I do think the hype, especially in regards to It's A Wonderful Life and Braveheart, is a little out of hand.

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  32. @CS Haha well, I'm glad we can agree on some of them. The hype for some of these is just too much.

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  33. Awesome post! From the movies you mentioned I don't like Gladiator and Return of The King, which is such a mess I barely made it through it, even though I enjoyed Fellowship of The Ring. I have 0 interest in seeing The Hobbit which from its trailer appear to be even dumber than lotr. From other popular movies I hate "Aliens" because Cameron followed horror by making his typical action cliche-loaded shit and Alien wasn't even menacing in this one and speaking of him I also can't stand "Avatar".

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  34. @Sati. Oh my god, another Return of the King hater... you just made my day.

    Aliens is a very interesting choice. I like the movie, but it is nowhere near as brilliant as Alien. I've never really been a huge Cameron fan, but I do think The Abyss is quite a fine film.

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  35. Spook Street Fo Lyfe!November 7, 2012 at 4:30 PM

    I would be interested in hearing your thoughts on comparing the differences between the Fellowship's ending and the ending to No Country for Old Men. I found the Rings films to be much as you described, and yet, in No Country, I was left with a much different feeling. It was as if I knew that there was no more to be said, even though Bardem ran free. It just was what it was, just like in real life. It’s amazing how tantalizing it was to see someone act with such disregard for human life and never pay the price, and yet, you could relate to the outcome. Obviously different genres of film but I wondered if you saw the similarities of ending a film on a quiet note and resulting in much different emotions. Call it, friendo.

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    1. I think you described the end to No Country perfectly. We agree all the way there. The difference, to me, between the two is that the Fellowship ending is so acutely aware that there are two more movies to come, so they just said, Uhh, well, hell, let's just cut out here. At least that's how it felt to me.

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