I wished I had never seen Open Water. The first one, of course. The fact that movie was based on true events and a real couple. Ugh! Poor people!
120 Days Of Sodhom and Dogville. Both great films, but very, very hard to watch.
For films that were just plain piece of crap wastes of valuable time, I'm going to have to go with M. Night Shama-lama-ding-dong's, The Happening and just about every single Adam Sandler film ever crapped out on to celluloid.
I think George Clooney's track record's only slightly better than Adam Saddler's in this regard: Solaris, Men Who Stare at Goats, Fantastic Mr. Fox, Brother Where Art Thou. Not a Clooney flick, but also abysmal - Cloverfield.
Drag Me To Hell - left the theater feeling creeped out and hopeless
Eyes Wide Shut - Besides Nicole Kidman's nude scene, I don't even have a clue what it was about. Did it even have a plot at all?
Nope! The movie was complete mess! The ending was ridiculous.
"A Clockwork Orange" horrified me. I left the theater the middle of the movie.
Had the same reaction to "The Shining."
Seven - dark, twisted, accomplished what it wanted to but I never need to see it again.
Hostel - didn't even make it all the way through.
Actually, although I admire the film, the dead baby in Trainspotting really messed me up. I just can't with that baby. I can't.
Omg, so so many. the last movie i can honestly say i finished it by saying "the f--k?" and had to seriously fight the urge to throw the DVD in the garbage was "The Lobster." don't do it. if you do, you've been warned.
I was out of the room during the first scene of Jaws.
Left the theater just after the sliding glass/head bit in "The Omen."
I have no interest in such stupid.
Wait... You didn't enjoy Jaws???
@Jacar
Interesting. Aside from the long-term damage it's done to shark populations and reputations (which the author has apologized for and attempted to make up for), where is the unhappiness?
@Jacar
Ah, okay. I understand now. I LOVE scary movies. But the only ones that actually creep me out involve bees/wasps ('cause I'm terrified of them) and creepy little kids.
Clockwork Orange. It was 120 minutes of try-real-hardism.
@maturin1919 yep.
Yes. "Glen Cary, Glen Ross: with Jack Lemon. It was the most depressing movie I have ever seen.
And to think, many businesses use it as a how-to manual these days.
Yes. Kids (1995) is fucked up.
I'm going to have to agree with you on that one.
I love that movie, but it is really heavy.
No , and thank you for not reminding me of it , ha .
Deep Throat.
@PalacinkyPDX HAHA! IMAX would be amazing!
The movie I wished I'd never seen was actually a very good movie. Disney's "Old Yeller" (1957). I saw it once and I'll never watch it again. What "Beaches" is to women, "Old Yeller" is to guys.
Man... Old Yeller is SO damn good, and SO damn sad.
Hanger and The Ring
Hanger is just, messed up beyond words and the ring is the scariest sht I’ve never seen
I freakin' loved the Ring. Lol.
A movie called The One
The Jet Li movie?
@joeymf86 yes thats the one lols
"The Plague Dogs"
Don't. Just Don't.
I wonder if it's better or worse than Watership Down.
Any movie whose claim to fame is gratuitous violence marked with overuse of nonsensical CGI fight scenes, car crashes and explosions.
This ALMOST sounds like Deadpool. Which is impossible, 'cause Deadpool is absolutely amazing!
I saw Deadpool 1 and I loved it because it was well made and the humor was world class. The ending fight scene fits my description of being nonsensical but it was quickly forgiven because they more than made up for it by making me laugh and keeping me entertained all the way til that point.
@jujuofthesea
Fair points! I've been a fan of Deadpool since the mid-90's. I was ecstatic when they made that movie as true to the character as they did. I figured they'd nail the humor, but even capturing the way he moves and fights.
Deadpool 2 is also really good.