Sahara...38%; objectively not good, yet I can't help but love it.
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k im just not going to respond to your #### anymore because i have better things to do like #### my model girlfriend rather then try to convince people like you of commonly held hockey knowledge.
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Richie Rich with Macauley Culkin was my go to movie as a kid!
But actually thinking about it, 24% makes perfect sense.
One of the rare movies to make the list. When it came out Shaw still had those cable boxes that you had to rent for PPV's. I'd rented one to watch Wrestlemania and didn't have to return it til the next day. So I went to the bar with a friend and came home absolutely blasted and spent $24.99 renting that movie.
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I love Clifford with Martin Short playing a 10-year-old boy and Charles Grodin is his uncle who hates kids but tries to bond with him to impress his fiancée.
Sahara...38%; objectively not good, yet I can't help but love it.
I would have loved for them to keep the series going, the books are good. Too bad they blew their budget and bombed at the box office, it's a really fun premise and set of characters
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I love a good bad movie. My all time favourite good bad movie is Samurai Cop. Samurai Cop is a bit of a hidden gem, it was made in 1991, was mostly lost for years and then found and built a bit of a cult status in the mid 2000's. It even had a sequel made upon cult status in 2015 (it sucked though). Each time I watch Samurai Cop I find a new error or something to laugh at on each watch.
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Last edited by Larry David; 07-09-2019 at 04:21 PM.
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Ok, first of all, I was going to bring up Wolfcop, but its a 60 on rotten tomatoes.
So the other one, and they've been playing it quite a bit on rewind is Beer League, with Artie Lange and Ralph Macchio. Some of the characters and lines by Lange are outright brilliant.
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Surfer, dude with McConaughey as chill long boarder who spends the entire movie shirtless. Cameos by Willie Nelson and Woody Harrelson make this a very enjoyable movie when you are on the same mind altering plane as them 3. 0% rating, i maybe the only person to watch this
Gung Ho from that powerhouse year of cinema, 1986 comes to mind. 33% on RT.
Michael Keaton stars as a wheeler-dealer who hopes to save a failing Pennsylvania automobile-assembly factory from having to close its doors. Keaton persuades a Japanese auto firm to reopen the factory, retrain its staff, and streamline the operation. It isn't long before the American-born workers grow to resent the disciplinary demands of their new Japanese bosses, setting the stage for a comic clash of cultures.
There's a classic scene whereby a Japanese Executive berates employees by making them wear "ribbons of shame" and whenever I'm in a meeting and some uppity-up or HR type is getting wound up I secretly them picturing them yelling "Zos are riiibons of shaaame!" and it cracks me up inside.
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Michael Keaton was so brilliant before he became a serious actor. Mr Mom is one of the funniest movies that I've ever seen.
I recently watched Night Shift (which was great) with him in it and the dude had some serious comedic chops. I haven't watched a ton of Keaton movies but I could totally understand how fans would be worried when he was cast as Batman given his previous work at the time.
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