It's not really SF, more fantasy, but I have to tell you that Hercules in New York is quite possibly the worst film I've ever seen. More than that, it is worse than you can possibly imagine. Truly, cringingly awful in a way that is not even funny.
It's not really SF, more fantasy, but I have to tell you that Hercules in New York is quite possibly the worst film I've ever seen. More than that, it is worse than you can possibly imagine. Truly, cringingly awful in a way that is not even funny.
Didn't that star the Governator?
Bests, Mark
"We must believe in free will. We have no choice" Isaac Bashevis Singer
Yep.
I thought so Never seen it though...
Ok, here goes. Bad Taste by Peter Jackson
Street Trash, more of a horror than a sci fi admittedly
Brain Damage Which i guess is more scif fi
Before you ask i do have them all on DVD
Bests, Mark
"We must believe in free will. We have no choice" Isaac Bashevis Singer
Saturn 3
I'm not sure if you'll get the same recommendations at the bottom of the page, but i have all of them
Omega Man, eXistenZ, Solar Crisis, Sunshine (absolutely bloomin awesome!), Clockstoppers.
Bests, Mark
"We must believe in free will. We have no choice" Isaac Bashevis Singer
I have seen Inseminod.....dreadful pile of crap.
I will have to get myself a copy of the Blob remake.
Regards D D S L
'Saturn 3' - now that is bad.
'Omega Man' is not so much bad, it's just so predictable! 'eXistenZ', being a David Cronenberg film is disgustingly visceral but contains some interesting ideas - the ending is beautifully ambigious: are the game players themselves part of a bigger game - are we, as watchers?
Barry
Videodrome. Has some very uncomfortable moments.
'Salvador' is better than 'Videodrome': though a "video nasty" about video nasties is clever idea, it's just, as has been said, uncomfortable viewing.
John Woods is a good actor, however he does get given some awful films to appear in. 'Naked Lunch' is appalling - an absolute travesty of the book, but then maybe the book is un-filmable. But they said that of 'Catch 22'.
Regards
Barry