0 Rotten Tomatoes Movies Rating: 6,4/10 3657 votes
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By/Nov. 9, 2017 1:41 pm EST

Movies That Earned A 0% Rating On Rotten Tomatoes A Thousand Words (2012) Bucky Larson: Born To Be A Star (2011) Nutcracker In 3D (2010) Manos: The Hands of Fate (1966) Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2 (2004) One Missed Call (2008) Ballistic: Ecks Vs. Sever (2002) Jaws: The Revenge Gotti Look Who's. 26 films Rotten Tomatoes got 100 percent wrong. 27 percent rotten This may not be a great movie, but it is a surprisingly faithful adaptation of the story and (sometimes hokey) spirit of the.

Rotten Tomatoes has attracted controversy in Hollywood because of the way it reduces movie reviews to numbers, then calculates those numbers to create a percentage that's meant to tell the reader how good or bad a movie is. Some critics and filmmakers dislike the reductiveness of this method, feeling that it lacks nuance. That may be true, but it's still a useful tool to grade how movies were received by the critical community and the public. With that perspective in mind, we've assembled a list of movie stars who have appeared in a surprisingly high number of movies that received a 0 percent score.

These aren't necessarily bad actors. In fact, most of them are quite talented—their careers have just led them down strange and occasionally unfortunate paths. But it's still interesting to look at who has the most terrible movies under their belts—some of these stars will surprise you, while others...won't.

Corey Feldman

It's not easy being a grown-up child star. As a teenager in the 1980s, Corey Feldman was in movies that are still considered classics, like The Lost Boys, Goonies, and Stand By Me. Of course, even then, not every movie was a hit. For example, Dream a Little Dream, a sort of Big in reverse in which Feldman's body is possessed by the mind of a much older man, was a disaster. As he got older, good roles were much harder to find, but Feldman was determined to keep working, even if it meant playing a character named Phlegm in a terrible movie like Stepmonster. He's also reprised his Lost Boys character in two poorly received sequels, The Tribe and The Thirst. But the important thing is that he's still in the game, and not doing too badly for himself. He gets a lot of work as a voice actor these days, and seems to have his life much more together than he did in his youth.

Corey Feldman's 0 percent movies

Dream a Little Dream (1989)

Stepmonster (1993)

Lost Boys: The Tribe (2008)

Lost Boys: The Thirst (2010)

Cary Elwes

Cary Elwes is a talented and handsome actor who made a big splash as the male romantic lead in the 1987 comedic fantasy classic The Princess Bride, but somehow his career never quite got off the ground. He seemed too good-looking to be a character actor, but never established himself as a leading man. That's led to a long career of taking whatever parts he can get. He's been the dad in a sex comedy, and the district attorney in a crime thriller. He's played a creepy theatre owner and a creepy doctor in B-grade horror movies. He's had a multi-decade career as a working film actor, and that's nothing to sneeze at, but it's been a long time since he was in a mainstream project that drew much in the way of positive attention; his most high-profile release in recent years is arguably his Princess Bride memoir, published in 2014.

Cary Elwes's 0 percent movies

Edison Force (2006)

Behaving Badly (2014)

A Haunting in Cawdor (2016)

Don't Sleep (2017)

John Candy

The late John Candy is one of the all-time great comedic performers, but the sad truth about comedy is that while some things land and make everyone laugh, some attempts are inevitably going to miss. For every Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, there's a Wagons East. For every Stripes, there's a Once Upon a Crime. Sometimes you get to play an over-the-top radio DJ in Little Shop of Horrors, but then you end up voicing a horse opposite Bobcat Goldthwait in Hot to Trot. And appearing in the first National Lampoon's Vacation movie gets balanced out with a role in the third installment in the Cannonball Run series. John Candy always gave it his all, but some projects just can't be saved.

John Candy's 0 percent movies

Hot to Trot (1988)

Speed Zone (1989)

Once Upon a Crime (1991)

Wagons East! (1994)

Christian Slater

Christian Slater was a teen actor in the '80s, but while he's remained consistently famous in the decades since, he's also made some pretty questionable choices along the way. Run for the Money, for example, is a bomb of a crime thriller that's also known as Hard Cash (a movie having two completely different titles is always a bad sign). Then there's Basil, an unsuccessful costume drama in which Slater plays second banana to a young Jared Leto. In Assassin's Bullet, Slater is an FBI agent who uncovers a nearly nonsensical assassination plot. And in the horror film Playback, he plays a lecherous cop who helps set the plot in motion without being central to it. More recently, Slater has found a home as the title character on the acclaimed TV series Mr. Robot, which is working out better for him than most of the movies he's made in the past couple of decades

Christian Slater's 0 percent movies
Basil (1997)

Run for the Money (2002)

Playback (2002)

Assassin's Bullet (2012)

Danny Trejo

Movies

There aren't many true B-movie actors on this list, because if your whole filmography consists of little-seen low-budget films, not many will even be reviewed by enough critics to receive a Rotten Tomatoes ranking. But Danny Trejo is a special case—a true cult actor who's gained a surprising amount of mainstream fame thanks largely to his working relationship with director Robert Rodriguez, who's given him parts in movies like From Dusk Till Dawn and Spy Kids, as well as the lead in Machete and its sequel Machete Kills.

Along the way, Trejo has also lended his uniquely grizzled appearance and voice to some pretty questionable projects, such as the Charles Bronson vehicle Kinjite: Forbidden Subjects, Jean-Claude Van Damme's Desert Heat, and the Michael Madsen vehicle The Killing Jar. He also appeared in the fourth Crow movie, The Crow: Wicked Prayer, as well as the Los Angeles-based drama Living the Dream and the Los Angeles-based satire L.A. Slasher, neither of which won over critics even a little bit. Most recently, Trejo was in the Adam Sandler comedy western The Ridiculous Six, which is somehow less funny than most westerns that aren't comedies.

Danny Trejo's 0 percent movies

Kinjite: Forbidden Subjects (1989)

Desert Heat (1999)

The Crow: Wicked Prayer (2005)

Living the Dream (2006)

The Killing Jar (2010)

The Ridiculous Six (2015)

L.A. Slasher (2015)

Donald Sutherland

The only real reason Donald Sutherland makes this list is the length of his career. Sure, he's starred in well-reviewed movies from 1970's M*A*S*H to 1993's Six Degrees of Separation and 2012's The Hunger Games, but when you make movies nonstop for 50 years, you're bound to end up in some duds along the way. Sutherland costarred with Christian Slater in the aforementioned Assassin's Bullet, but that wasn't even his first disastrous assassination thriller—he'd already been in Shadow Conspiracy with Charlie Sheen. In 1984, he appeared in Crackers, a crime comedy that had been written for John Belushi, who died before he could make it, and which never really worked without him. He was the bad dad in the deeply unpleasant thriller Benefit of the Doubt. And he also appeared in the weird and widely disliked Nicholas Roeg effort Puffball. With a career like Donald Sutherland's, there's no reason to dwell on the bad stuff, but there's certainly plenty of it there if you look.

Movies

Donald Sutherland's 0 percent movies

Crackers (1984)

0% Rotten Tomatoes Movies

Benefit of the Doubt (1993)

Shadow Conspiracy (1997)

Puffball (2008)

Assassin's Bullet (2012)

0 Rotten Tomatoes Movies

Christopher Lambert

Remember Highlander 2: The Quickening? In case you don't, it's the ridiculously convoluted sequel to the pretty good sci-fi movie Highlander. Both films, and several other Highlander sequels, star Christopher Lambert. And of course, starring in a reasonably popular sci-fi franchise means getting cast in a bunch other sci-fi movies. Fortress 2 was also much worse a movie than Fortress (but probably still better than Highlander 2). Adrenalin: Fear the Rush sounds like the title of an extreme sports movie, but it's actually about a dystopian plague. And then there's Beowulf, an adaptation of the Old English epic poem which is set in the future for some reason, and stars Lambert in the title role. This is the sort of movie you end up in when you were the Highlander.

Christopher Lambert's 0 percent movies

Highlander 2: The Quickening (1991)

Adrenalin: Fear the Rush (1996)

Fortress 2: Re-Entry (1999)

Beowulf (1999)

Heather Graham

Heather Graham is a beautiful, charismatic, and talented actress, but her career has undeniably had its ups and downs. For one thing, Hollywood has a problem with both sexism and ageism. And while she'd been working since the '80s, she didn't really become a movie star until she was in Boogie Nights and Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me. By then she was 30, and the film industry was unfortunately more interested in beautiful blondes who'd yet to reach that age. She kept working, of course, but she wasn't always offered top-level material. She starred in Killing Me Softly, which wanted to be an art film but was mostly just a mix of trashy and confusing. Father of Invention wanted to be a quirky dramedy, but had nothing going for it. She joined Cary Elwes as a token adult in the teen sex comedy Behaving Badly, and more recently starred in My Dead Boyfriend, an indie comedy that got lost in its own attempts at quirkiness and just came out unlikable. Heather Graham is an actress worth watching, but the same can't be said for all of her movies.

Heather Graham's 0 percent movies

Killing Me Softly (2003)

Father of Invention (2011)

Behaving Badly (2014)

My Dead Boyfriend (2016)

Gina Gershon

Gina Gershon also appeared in My Dead Boyfriend with Heather Graham, and is another actress who was aging out of ingenue roles by the time people noticed she existed. And anyway, playing a bisexual stripper in Showgirls and a butch lesbian ex-con in Bound, while getting her some considerable attention in the mid-'90s, was never going to lead to massive mainstream stardom. She's appeared in the incomprehensible arthouse noir film Lulu on the Bridge as well as Beer for My Horses, a movie written by and starring country singer Toby Keith, based on his song of the same name that glorifies vigilante violence. In 2017, she was in Bad Kids of Crestview Academy, which could best be described as an attempt to a do a horror version of The Breakfast Club, but with a much less impressive script. Gina Gershon is one of those actors who will try just about any sort of project, a bravery that only sometimes works out in her favor.

Gina Gershon's 0 percent movies

Lulu on the Bridge (1998)

Beer for My Horses (2008)

My Dead Boyfriend (2016)

Bad Kids of Crestview Academy (2017)

Tom Arnold

If you know who Tom Arnold is, there's no way it's surprising to find him on this list. After all, he's still most famous for marrying Roseanne Barr, and they were only married for four years—and have been divorced for more than 20. But that marriage came at the height of her fame, and so it lended him some fame of his own. That and a well-regarded performance in the Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle True Lies led to starring roles in films like Big Bully, a lackluster buddy comedy co-starring Rick Moranis. Arnold built on that persona to play the mythical Boogeyman himself in the deeply weird children's fantasy Hansel and Gretel. In more recent years, he's mostly been cast as an inside joke, like in Dax Shepard's vanity project Brother's Justice. He teaches Sean Bean (TV's Ned Stark) to make pizza in the indie bore Any Day. If there's one thing you can say for Tom Arnold, it's that his career has at least been unusual.

Tom Arnold's 0 percent movies

Big Bully (1996)

Hansel & Gretel (2002)

Brother's Justice (2011)

Any Day (2015)

Steve Guttenberg

Thanks to movies like Cocoon, Three Men and a Baby, and Short Circuit, Steve Guttenberg was one of the most popular movie stars of the 1980s. He was probably most associated with the Police Academy movies, the first of which has the highest Rotten Tomatoes score of the series, at 41 percent. Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrolearned a goose egg—and once the 1980s were over, Guttenberg's star also fell quickly. He starred in The Big Green, Disney's failed attempt to do a soccer version of the The Bad News Bears, and appeared in Casper: A Spirited Beginning, the decidedly unspirited prequel to the 1995 Casper film. In 2011, he returned to romantic lead territory in A Novel Romance, and it didn't go well.

These days a lot of younger people only know Steve Guttenberg's name as a punchline in the Simpsons episode 'Homer the Great,' and even that episode is more than 20 years old. That just demonstrates how fickle fame can be, and how nobody really gets to choose what they're be remembered for. Some stars shine bright enough to overcome the shadows of their worst projects, but others, no matter how hard they try, will be remembered for the bad choices they made.

Steve Guttenberg's 0 percent movies

Police Academy 4 – Citizens on Patrol (1987)

The Big Green (1995)

Casper: A Spirited Beginning (1997)

A Novel Romance (2011)

Bad movies can be some of the most entertaining ones you’ll ever see. Think about all the joy that notorious films like “The Room” and “Plan 9 from Outer Space” have brought to millions of people just for the unintentional laughs they inspire. But there’s nothing worse than a bad movie that brings no fun to the table.

Rotten Tomatoes is arguably the internet’s most trusted source for judging which movies are worth your time and which should be skipped, thanks to its review aggregation process. If you’re unfamiliar with the site, here’s how it works: It pulls reviews from thousands of trusted film critics across the web and gives movies a score, from 0-100, simply based on the percentage of critics that gave it a favorable review.

It’s difficult to pull off, but a select few movies have been so bad that they’ve earned a 0% rating, meaning not a single trusted critic who reviewed the film gave it a positive notice. Here are the 25 lowest-scoring English-language movies ever at Rotten Tomatoes — aka the worst movies ever reviewed on Rotten Tomatoes. These losers represent every genre, from dramas to action films, from comedies to horror and even musicals.

25. ‘Highlander 2: The Quickening’ (1991)


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Number of Reviews: 23

The original “Highlander,” which hit theaters in 1986, was cheesy as can be but had enough entertainment value to earn a 68% score at Rotten Tomatoes.

The sequel, which boasted an even better cast, was destroyed by critics in 1991. “Highlander 2” picked up the story, which is set in a world where a race of immortal humans exist among the everyday people. The film was slammed for its incomprehensible narrative, with TV Guide calling it “desperately overplotted.”

24. ‘The Disappointments Room’ (2016)


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Number of Reviews: 24

The title and tagline for this horror film, readable on the DVD cover below, seem like self-fulfilling prophecies when you consider how bad the reviews for it were. Kate Beckinsale was the big star attached, and she apparently couldn’t make it worth watching.

The film was about a family that moves to a Southern mansion and start realizing the house has creepy secrets, including a hidden room. If it sounds like a plot you’ve heard in several other scary movies, you’d be right. Los Angeles Times film critic Katie Walsh was ruthless in her review, writing that the film “would be better off locked up in the attic and forgotten for good.”

23. ‘Homecoming’ (2009)


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Number of Reviews: 24

When viewers saw that “Homecoming” was directed by a guy named Morgan Freeman, they may have thought it would be solid — but it was the wrong Morgan Freeman. This thriller was about a woman who gets jealous over seeing her ex-boyfriend with a new girlfriend, leading her to plot a violent way to regain his attention.

“Homecoming” starred Mischa Barton, of “The O.C.” fame, and was labeled a bad ripoff of “Misery” by some of the 24 top critics who slammed it. Critic Stephen Holden of The New York Times simply called the film “trash” in his review.

22. ‘Staying Alive’ (1983)


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Number of Reviews: 24

Another of the six sequels to make the list, “Staying Alive” is also one of three movies starring John Travolta in this Hall of Shame, which is the most of any actor. This was the followup to 1977’s “Saturday Night Fever,” which was a huge hit with critics and audiences.

The script for “Staying Alive” was written by Sylvester Stallone and directed by his brother, Frank Stallone. Critics called it a pale imitation of its soulful predecessor, with BBC.com writer Ali Barclay saying it “constantly falls flat on its face.”

21. ‘Look Who’s Talking Now!’ (1993)


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Number of Reviews: 25

All three of the “Look Who’s Talking” movies got failing grades at Rotten Tomatoes, but the finale, 1993’s “Look Who’s Talking Now!”, was the only one to get a 0%. All 25 reviewers hated it, as the series added talking pups into its already tired gimmick of talking babies.

John Travolta and Kirstie Alley were back again, joined by some serious talent like Danny DeVito and Oscar winners Diane Keaton and Olympia Dukakis. But a great cast couldn’t save this dog, with legendary critic Roger Ebert writing that it “looks like it was chucked up by an automatic screenwriting machine.”

20. ‘MAC and Me’ (1988)


Rated

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Number of Reviews: 25

Movies simply don’t get more beloved than 1982’s “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial,” and this 1988 stinker was an obvious ripoff. “MAC and Me” was about a boy in a wheelchair who helps a stranded alien reunite with his intergalactic family. The alien’s name, MAC, was an acronym for “mysterious alien creature.” So, as you can see, the creativity was off the charts here. It also didn’t help that MAC was ugly enough to frighten the very kids who are the movie’s target audience.

The Rotten Tomatoes page for “MAC and Me” labels it as “a thinly veiled feature-length commercial for McDonald’s and Coca-Cola.

19. ‘Redline’ (2007)


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Number of Reviews: 27

As you’ve already seen, blatant ripoffs of popular movies don’t tend to get much love from critics, and 2007’s “Redline” falls into that category as well.

This bargain-bin version of “The Fast and the Furious” had a cast that included Eddie Griffin and Tim Matheson trying to drive it to victory. It was about a bunch of drivers getting together for an illegal race with a $24 million purse. Sounds pretty intense but it was apparently a lemon.

Many critics piled on the film’s overt sexism, with Lisa Rose of the Newark Star-Ledger writing, “The cars in the film are treated with more respect than the women.”

18. ‘Cabin Fever’ (2016)


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Number of Reviews: 28

Believe it or not, this is the only remake on the list. Infamous horror director Eli Roth’s 2002 gore-fest, “Cabin Fever,” earned a 62% score from critics at Rotten Tomatoes because it had plenty of entertainment value; the 2016 remake could not boast the same trait.

This version of “Cabin Fever” opted to double down on the nasty visuals but lose the charm and laughs of the original. Geoff Berkshire of Vanity Fair, one of 28 critics who gave this one a hard pass, simply stated, “This dud sets a new standard for the term ‘pointless remake'”.

17. ‘Shadow Conspiracy’ (1997)


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Number of Reviews: 28

You’d think a high-stakes political thriller from the director of “Tombstone” would be worth your time, but this one left plenty to be desired. “Shadow Conspiracy” had a very impressive cast that included Charlie Sheen (when he could still be taken seriously as an actor), Donald Sutherland, Sam Waterston and Linda Hamilton. Its plot involved an assassin trying to gun down top members of the president’s cabinet.

All 28 critics counted by Rotten Tomatoes gave it a harsh grade, but Roger Ebert probably summed it up best when he said, “There isn’t a brain in its empty little head.

16. ‘3 Strikes’ (2000)


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Number of Reviews: 29

One of the lowest-rated comedies on Rotten Tomatoes, this 2000 dud didn’t seem to make any critics laugh.

Directed by D.J. Pooh, who co-wrote the classic ’90s flick “Friday,” “3 Strikes” was about a former criminal who has two strikes on his record and is trying desperately to avoid a third, which could send him to prison for life. The premise was solid and the cast included hilarious actors like David Alan Grier, Mo’Nique and George Wallace, but “3 Strikes” was destined for a death sentence.

Eric Harrison of the Los Angeles Times wrote it off as “sophomoric and unfunny” in just one of its 29 bad reviews.

15. ‘Wagons East’ (1994)


0 Percent Rotten Tomatoes Movies

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Number of Reviews: 29

It’s sad that “Wagons East” ended up being John Candy’s final movie role because it was, by all accounts, terrible. It lampooned the formulas of Hollywood’s classic Westerns and didn’t do it very well.

Co-stars Candy and Richard Lewis are both very funny normally, but “Wagons East” was pegged as a ripoff of the immortal “Blazing Saddles.” Upon its release in 1994, critic Gary Thompson of the Philadelphia Daily News labeled it, “A candidate for one of the year’s worst movies.”

14. ‘Problem Child’ (1990)


Number of Reviews: 29

When talented actors like John Ritter, Jack Warden and Michael Richards can’t earn you a single positive review, your movie was doomed from the start.

“Problem Child” was a comedy about a couple who adopts a child who turns out to be a complete terror. The film was directed by Dennis Dugan, who would go on to collaborate frequently with Adam Sandler, often with a similar critical reaction.

The Rotten Tomatoes overview of this one simply calls it “mean-spirited” and “unpleasant.”

13. ‘Return to the Blue Lagoon’ (1991)


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Number of Reviews: 30

Why someone decided to make a sequel to an already panned movie, 11 years after the fact, is beyond us, but that’s what happened with “Return to the Blue Lagoon.”

The 1980 film “The Blue Lagoon” earned a terrible, 9% grade at Rotten Tomatoes — but that’s a good deal better than the score earned by its sequel. “Return to the Blue Lagoon” swapped Brooke Shields for Milla Jovovich in its lead role, and its plot again followed two attractive teens stranded on a tropical island. The scenery was praised but not enough to get any positive reviews from the 30 critics scored.

Carrie Rickey of the Philadelphia Inquirer said it was “neither campy enough to be howlingly funny nor prurient enough to be provocative.”

12. ‘The Nutcracker in 3D (2010)


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Number of Reviews: 31

Here’s yet another example of a fantastic cast being unable to turn a movie into something worth your time. “The Nutcracker in 3D” boasted a young Elle Fanning as its star, along with Nathan Lane, John Turturro and source material that’s as beloved as any piece of entertainment ever created.

The 31 reviews counted by Rotten Tomatoes from trusted critics are absolutely ruthless and more fun to read than the film was to see. David Edelstein of New York Magazine bluntly stated that the film “has so many terrible ideas that the terrible execution is almost irrelevant.”

11. ‘Stratton’ (2017)


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Number of Reviews: 34

A British soldier hunting down agents of a terrorist organization sounds like a pretty foolproof premise for an action film. In the case of 2017’s “Stratton,” it ended up being an impossible mission. ”

Mamma Mia!” actor Dominic Cooper and Harry Potter series star Tom Felton were part of the cast of this stinker, which critics decried for feeling like a low-budget blockbuster. Most of the 34 critics who gave it bad marks didn’t outright slam it as terrible but they said it was full of cliches and ended up getting the worst label an action movie can get: boring.

Dennis Harvey of Variety said, “This thriller never finds (let alone raises) its own pulse.”

10. ‘Dark Crimes’ (2016)


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Number of Reviews: 34

It’s a shame that “Dark Crimes” was so universally panned when it has a solid premise and a lead actor as gifted as Jim Carrey.

This thriller saw Carrey playing a detective investigating a murder that seems eerily similar to the plot of a crime book, making its author a prime suspect. The whole plot was based on a true story, but the film version didn’t live up to the real-life drama.

0 Rated Movies Rotten Tomatoes

Carrey’s performance was praised by many critics but the film itself was ripped, with Johnny Olekinski of the New York Post writing, “That this exercise in vulgarity was made at all is shameful.” Ouch.

9. ‘Bucky Larson: Born to Be a Star’ (2011)


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Number of Reviews: 35

This awful comedy was directed by a guy named Tom Brady, but please don’t confuse him with the legendary football player.

“Bucky Larson: Born to Be a Star” has one of the most cringe-worthy premises in cinema history, following the story of a naive small-town guy who becomes a porn star despite being, ahem, severely underqualified. The cast is solid, including Nick Swardson, Christina Ricci, Kevin Nealon and Stephen Dorff, but the material is just awful.

Critics were brutal in response, with Time Out’s Matt Singer calling it “dire, soul-crushing stuff.”

8. ‘Jaws: The Revenge’ (1987)


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Number of Reviews: 35

Steven Spielberg’s 1975 thriller “Jaws” is widely considered one of the best movies ever made, holding down a 98% score at Rotten Tomatoes that somehow still seems low.

Meanwhile, 1987’s “Jaws: The Revenge,” the fourth film in an already bad series at that point, is considered one of the worst movies ever put to film. The plot is completely laughable, with the legendary shark now supposedly focusing specifically on killing members of the family of Police Chief Brody, the hero from the first film.

Sheila Benson of the Los Angeles Times called it “dumb beyond belief.” Perhaps the saddest part of “Jaws: The Revenge” is that the great Michael Caine was among its cast.

7. ‘The Ridiculous 6’ (2015)


Number of Reviews: 36

Adam Sandler is no stranger to critically-abused films, but his 2015 Netflix movie “The Ridiculous 6” is his only one to have a 0% grade at Rotten Tomatoes. Even a few critics liked “Jack and Jill” enough for it to earn a 3% grade!

This one was called offensive by virtually anyone who watched it, as its plot is about six diverse strangers in the old west who discover they share the same father. Critic Debbie Day of The Wrap summed it up by writing, “‘The Ridiculous 6’ is everything wrong with Hollywood for the past two decades.”

6. ‘National Lampoon’s Gold Diggers’ (2003)


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Number of Reviews: 44

Now we are getting into truly rarified air, with movies that were reviewed by more than 40 critics and couldn’t land a single positive notice.

This 2003 comedy is about two young criminals who decide to marry a pair of older women in the hopes they will die quickly so they can inherit their money. If that doesn’t spell a laugh riot, I don’t know what could! Will Friedle from “Boy Meets World” starred in it and probably wishes he could strike it from his IMDb page.

Unsurprisingly, it was slammed for being mean-spirited, with Chicago Reader’s Hank Sartin writing, “Nothing’s quite so painful as failed comedy, and this atrocity is equivalent to a compound fracture.”

5. ‘Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2’ (2004)


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Number of Reviews: 45

In 1999, the family comedy “Baby Geniuses” used a surprisingly strong cast and the gimmick of talking babies (haven’t we seen that somewhere before on this list?) to earn a 2% grade at Rotten Tomatoes. It’s tough for any sequel to be worse than that, but “Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2” pulled it off. This stinker earned a 0% grade from 45 critics, making it the second worst-reviewed movie in Rotten Tomatoes history at the time it was made.

You’d be hard-pressed to find a single kind word about this movie, with separate critics calling it “excruciating” and “unspeakably ghastly.”

4. ‘Gotti’ (2018)


Number of Reviews: 54

John Travolta’s third — and most recent — star vehicle to earn a 0% grade, 2018’s “Gotti” was considered a crime against cinema on par with some of the things its mafioso lead character did.

Travolta and real-life wife Kelly Preston co-starred as the husband-wife duo of New York crime legend John Gotti and Victoria Gotti. The film was ripped for making Gotti out to be an admirable guy and for having no sense of narrative.

New York Post critic Johnny Oleksinski channeled a much better gangster movie in writing, “I’d rather wake up next to a severed horse head than ever watch ‘Gotti’ again.”

3. ‘A Thousand Words’ (2012)

Rotten Tomatoes Movies With 0


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Number of Reviews: 57

Another fantastic cast made a terrible movie with 2012’s “A Thousand Words.” When Kerry Washington, Allison Janney and Ruby Dee can’t save your film, it was doomed from the start.

This Eddie Murphy vehicle was about a dishonest guy who only has a certain number of words left to speak before facing dire consequences. The concept was high and clever but the film couldn’t live up to it, with 57 critics bashing it in unison.

The Rotten Tomatoes overview for this dud simply labels it a “painful mess.”

2. ‘One Missed Call’ (2008)


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Number of Reviews: 79

With more than double the amount of negative reviews of many movies on this list, “One Missed Call” could be called legendarily bad. This horror flick was a remake of a better Japanese film and is about people who are killed after receiving a phone call with the sounds of their own murder. Once again, a lofty concept gets completely misused, with 79 critics agreeing it was not worth the price of admission.

Several critics pointed out that its short runtime was its only positive, with The Hollywood Reporter’s Richard James Havis writing, “The direction is uninspired, acting is lifeless and the script borders on inept.”

1. ‘Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever’ (2002)


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Number of Reviews: 117

Worst Rated Movie Rotten Tomatoes

This race was never even close. The 2002 action movie “Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever” is the only movie with a 0% grade that has more than 100 critics on record.

Antonio Banderas and Lucy Liu, two very competent actors, couldn’t save what was labeled an unoriginal and boring flick that was poorly executed from start to finish. Critic Jami Bernard of the New York Daily News wrote that “between explosions there is enough room left for only minimal character development.”

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