The 10 Worst Movies to Open at #1
September 17, 2009 Posted in Entertainment, Movies

It’s not hard for a bad movie to open on top of the weekend box office chart — a combination of heavy marketing, recognizable stars, and a simple concept pretty much assures it. Every month, for example, a new bad horror movies comes and goes. Remember The Messengers, Darkness Falls or Urban Legends: Final Cut? They were all the #1 movie in America at one point.
Romantic comedies work the same way: Forces of Nature, Monster-in-Law, and Failure to Launch all topped the box office in their day. And then there’s the awful kids’ movies that lazy parents pay for: Scooby Doo…Pokemon…The Pacifier…and the list goes on.
The thing about all these movies is that they’re passively bad. Everybody already knew they would suck, and they’re quickly forgotten. Sometimes, however, a movie opens at #1 that is really bad. Offensively bad. Beg-for-your-money-back, sign-of-the-impending-apocalypse bad. Here are the 10 Worst Movies to Open at #1.
10. Die Another Day
Release Date: November 22, 2002
Opening Weekend Box Office: $47,072,040
Here’s an idea of how bad this movie was: it was the highest-grossing James Bond film ever, and instead of following it up with a fast-tracked sequel, they ended up rebooting the whole franchise and recasting the main character.
So what sunk the film? Things didn’t exactly start well: in the beginning of the movie, Bond gets captured for seven months (what? Why couldn’t he escape after fifteen minutes like in every other movie?), and we see scenes from his captivity to the tune of a horribly synthesized theme song by Madonna.
Then we’re introduced to the bad guy, a North Korean who undergoes reconstructive surgery to become a prissy-looking Englishman. Really. And then there was the infamous invisible car. Sure, there was Halle Berry in a swimsuit, but when you can see Halle Berry naked outright in a bunch of other movies, who cares?

9. Pearl Harbor
Release Date: May 25, 2001
Opening Weekend Box Office: $59,078,912
And old-fashioned love story set against the attack on Pearl Harbor? Sadly, this wasn’t another From Here to Eternity. Instead, it was nominated for six Razzies, failed to break the $200 million mark following its big opening, and basically ruined Ben Affleck and Josh Hartnett’s legitimacy for years to come. It was even one of Cuba Gooding Jr.’s lesser movies, which is saying something.

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8. The Village
Release Date: July 30, 2004
Opening Weekend Box Office: $50,746,142
To be totally honest, we’re including The Village on here simply because we hate all things M. Night Shymalan(a-ding-dong). But since you can’t really dog on Sixth Sense too much, and since Signs at least had aliens in it, we’ll leave that one be, as well. The Village, however, is by far Shymalan’s most contrived piece of crap ever to hit the big screen. The plot, the premise, the hook and the ending – none of it made a lick of sense if given any thought whatsoever. And to really add to its eternal suckitude, the whole thing was stolen from a kid’s book, Running Out of Time, which revolves around a village whose inhabitants believe it’s the 1800s, when it’s actually 1996. WEAK!

7. Norbit
Release Date: February 9, 2007
Opening Weekend Box Office: $34,195,434
In early 2008, Eddie Murphy was riding high: he was in the blockbuster musical Dreamgirls and was the frontrunner to win the Best Supporting Actor Oscar for it.
But then a little movie called Norbit came out, starring Eddie Murphy in three roles. And to give you an idea of just how offensively bad the movie was, Murphy playing a man named “Mr. Wong” is not the low point. No, the low point would be the movie’s sadistic villain, Rasputia, a three-hundred-pound woman, also played by Murphy.
The Oscar went to Alan Arkin.

6. Batman and Robin
Release Date: June 20, 1997
Opening Weekend Box Office: $42,872,605
Or, the movie that destroyed the Batman franchise. When you think about it positively, Batman Begins and The Dark Knight only ever happened thanks to the complete and utter creative failure of Batman and Robin. But what a complete and utter creative failure it was. It made it to #1 thanks to the success of the cheesy-but-entertaining Batman Forever, and ended up grossing about $60 million less. Nipples on the Batsuit? Weird gratuitous shots of Batman and Robin’s butts? Random ice-skating scenes? Batgirl? I mean, they didn’t even get Uma Thurman as Poison Ivy right.

5. Epic Movie (or Meet the Spartans, same difference…)
Release Date: January 26, 2007
Opening Weekend Box Office: $18,612,544
In a low-key kind of way, these movies really are some of the worst movies of all time. They’re easy to ignore, which helps, but have you actually seen them? It’s kind of terrifying how shockingly unfunny they are. They spoof scenes from recent movies without coming up with any kind of funny angle on them. They introduce pop culture references not to make a joke, but to simply mention pop culture references. Both movies (along with Date Movie and Disaster Movie) are brainchilds of the writing/directing duo Jason Friedburg and Aaron Seltzer, and you really kind of have to wonder what goes on in their heads and what their conversations are like. On second thought, don’t.

4. Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace
Release Date: May 19, 1999
Opening Weekend Box Office: $64,820,970
What can I say about this one that hasn’t already been said? Jar Jar Binks. Those two embarrassing Asian stereotypes. The kid they cast to play young Anakin. George Lucas’s utter disregard for characters and story in favor of special effects that look cartoonish and have not aged well. The fact that for too many children, this is the first Star Wars movie they’ve seen. Sometimes at night I cry about it a little.

3. Madea Goes to Jail
Release Date: February 20, 2009
Opening Weekend Box Office: $41,030,947
Or, “The Films of Tyler Perry.” Diary of a Mad Black Woman, Madea’s Family Reunion, Why Did I Get Married, Meet the Browns, and this past weekend’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself also all made it to #1, but Madea Goes to Jail gets the shout-out for the most painful, Ernest-recalling title. Perry writes and directs his films exclusively for an African American middle-aged female audience, a demographic so underserved by Hollywood that they’ll take whatever Perry gives them — even something filled to the brim with stereotypes and painfully unfunny grandmothers played by the director in drag.
Critics don’t have a clue how to deal with him; Roger Ebert gave Diary of a Mad Black Woman one star, saying “I’ve been reviewing movies for a long time, and I can’t think of one that more dramatically shoots itself in the foot.” And even actors are getting tired of the onslaught. Viola Davis, an Oscar nominee for Doubt who appeared in Madea Goes to Jail, told Entertainment Weekly: “People feel the images [in his movies] are very stereotypical, and black people are frustrated because they feel we should be more evolved. But there are very few black images in Hollywood, so black people are going to his movies. That’s the dichotomy.”

2. Paul Blart: Mall Cop
Release Date: January 16, 2009
Opening Weekend Box Office: $31,832,636
What was bizarre about this movie wasn’t that it opened at #1. It’s that it stayed at #1. And then kept doing well for weeks after that.
So what was so good that kept audiences coming and coming to the tune of $146 million? Kevin James doing a pratfall. Over…and over…and over again. Oh, and the gay guy from Wedding Crashers playing an over-the-top bad guy. And those were the redeeming parts (if you could call them that…). The acting sucked, the writing sucked, the story sucked. And whoever it is who helped pump millions of dollars into this piece of sh!t should be ashamed of themselves. (We know you’re out there…)

1. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Release Date: June 24, 2009
Opening Weekend Box Office: $108,966,307
When Revenge of the Fallen opened this summer and subsequently made zillions of dollars, a minor internet war took place between critics (“This is the worst, most headache-inducing thing we’ve ever seen”) and fans (“We just want to see giant robots fighting, not ever movie has to be an Oscar movie LOL PWNED”). I’m about to say something really pompous: I submit that those of you who think you liked it, didn’t actually like it. How is that possible? Well, think back to it. What do you remember? Anything? Did you think it was fun? Do you want to see it again? Be honest.
I saw this movie on my birthday, which just added insult to injury. The hard truth is, Revenge of the Fallen is the worst movie Michael Bay has ever made (and he made Pearl Harbor), and is a loud, nonsensical, abhorrently sexist, blatantly racist vehicle for his worst indulgences: lots of explosions; CGI overkill; incomprehensible action sequences; and vapid barely-dressed female characters played by bad actresses. It’s the worst movie to open at #1.

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Phantom Menace. Fuck.
Not bad. I agree with 70% of your list so pretty fair. Transformers is just fresh on th mind and thus makes top spot but am sure we can find worse ones if we thought hard. But the question is "why would I want to remember these movies" when I have been trying to forget them:-)
I watched ALMOST all films from the list though i am not a great fan of such genres. i admire horrors and thrillers which can be easily seen in my blogs. lol. but i watch also other movies of course. agree with all list except Transformers and Pearl Harbor! Liked both of them! I do not think that these 2 fims can be taken to one row with such stupid movies as Epic Movie and Norbit for example!
I thought that this list would be B.S. if one of the Transformers movies wasn't on top.
One of my friends went to see it opening night and told me it was "extremely good". I had been bashing the movie and those who wanted to see it mercilessly. A week later he was telling me a story about how he had been kicked out of a movie theater for passing out while drunk. I asked him which movie he was watching. I guess by now you know what his answer was.
and u didnt even include G.I Joe which was worst than transformers and paul blart, hell the only movie worst than GI Joe are epic movie and norbit
every film that comes out is THE BEST BLOCK BUSTER OF ALL TIME. they are all shit, i gave up on hollywood in 1992. also fuck you bob.
As with most "worst movie ever" lists, this is really just a list of films the author personally didn't like or movies HE thought he would make differently if he were a movie director. Anybody who thinks "Phantom Menace" is deserving of a worst top 10 slot has clearly not seen a lot of movies. Problem is, most truly awful movies, even high grossing movies, are not well enough remembered to make good funny reading. How about the Nick Nolte "Hulk"? Anybody remember "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls"? "Lost Horizon" the musical? I didn't think so.
You can LIKE any of these movies, but you can't say any of them are good. You need to develop the ability to separate personal taste and unbiased criticism.
I agree – all those movies really sucked!!
@ Bob you're so stupid. I guess you also think Americans founded America don't you? lls clear example of why one should travel and experience other cultures, and READ. Ghetton was a term for the slums on Italy: HISTORY 101 and a ghetto italian founded America while we're at it!! I hate dumb people.
@Bob @darklight = Trolls-Do Not Feed
Transformers: ROTF is the worst movie ever. Period. On any list that you could think of. Really.
…and only the uneducated use the word racist, when what they really mean is either prejudiced or stereotype.
Pearl Harbor *the movie* cost more to make than Pearl Harbor *the reality* cost to make.
Ghetto is spoken by more people world wide than the entire population of Rhode Island. Those are two Michael Bays primary demographics – Ghetto Speakers and Rhode Islanders. I do feel he is seriously excluding all PWTs and Rednecks by not having more of them (out side of Megan Fox) in his movies.
Oh dear God, when will Tyler Perry STOP MAKING MADEA MOVIES? With maybe two exceptions ("Diary of a Mad Black Woman" and "I Can Do Bad All by Myself"), they're not original.
I still can't believe "The Village" opened at no. 1, either. Talk about a twist anyone could see coming a mile away.
Revenge of the Fallen makes sense if you pay attention but I guess not everyone can pay attention to robots even though that is why they went to see the movie…. The racism argument is stupid and is inherently racist as I have known more white guys and Latinos that talk that way than blacks. The action sequences were well choreographed but once again apparently you cant pay attention. CGI overkill is half the point. and yes Megan Fox has no brain but e knew this.
Oh and I saw ROTF three times. SO yes I am sure I liked every moment robots were on screen. Shia and Megan….meh
Tyler Perry's Madea's Family Reunion was REALLY powerful and funny and this most recent one I've heard is very good. Sure some of the crap he makes it to pander to the lowest common denominator but when he's on, he's on.
All you people that are defending movies like Pearl Harbor or Transformers are the reason these God-Awful movies went to number 1 in the first place.
I walked out of the theatre an hour and a half into the 1st Transformers and demanded my money back. About an hour and a half into that movie the plot holes become some obnoxiously large there really is no point in continuing. Besides, those actions scenes are a jumbled mess.
I have to say that "The Village" was a bad movie, but "The Happening" was far worse. The acting in that movie comes across like the director kept the first take of everyone's dialogue.
Surely Kangaroo Jack belongs somewhere on this list?
Anything with Pierce Brosnan = worst film of all time. Die another day sucked. Thanks for list I enjoyed it :)
I too am distraught re Star Wars. When my Son reaches 7 or 8 we go straight to the original trilogy.