Top Ten Worst Movie
Titles
A picture says a
thousand words, but what does a movie title say? Well, it can be a simple,
to-the-point word that sums up everything you need to know about the premise,
or it could be a phrase, or a line from the movie, or a place, or a person, and
so on and so forth.
But sometimes, the
writers or producers or marketers or whoever it is who came up with the title
really craps the bed and that title is forever attached to that movie, whether
the movie is good or bad.
These ten instances,
though, are the most inexcusable. A title should trigger images of greatness
and heighten emotions at the mere mention of it, not the opposite.
[Dis]Honourable
Mentions:
Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole: this animated
movie about talking, warring owls is actually great. The title, though, is way
too long and meaningless. The series of books it’s based on is called Guardians of Ga’Hoole. They could’ve
went with that, or, just Legend of the
Guardians, but instead they tried to mash the two, and it didn’t work out
so well. Pretty sure everyone just calls it “That Owl Movie” now.
The Constant Gardener: I’ll give this title points for being
memorable, because I remember hearing it as a kid and just thinking, “what does
that even mean?” This guy is just always gardening, I guess. And it’s some kind
of dark thriller, so the trailer narrator always said it with that guttural undertone,
which just makes it sound even funnier. Not the worst title, but dumb indeed.
Edge of Tomorrow: the little Tom Cruise/Emily Blunt sci-fi
actioner that could (kind of), but what it couldn’t do was decide on a title. Edge of Tomorrow sounds like a soap
opera, the subtitle “Live. Die. Repeat.” Was half-adapted as its new title on
home video, and the original title, All
You Need Is Kill (which is what the book is called that it’s based on)
sounds better than either of those other two.
Sssssss: is that with six “S”’s or seven? I guess all the other
snake movie titles had been used up? At least they got the right match of
animal to sound effect. Fun fact: look this title up on YouTube and you’ll get
all kinds of weird, interesting, and disturbing results (beyond just the
movie).
Freddy Got Fingered: straight-up sounds like a porn title. A
horrible title, but the movie itself is horrible, so, I can’t say it’s one of
the worst titles ever. They give you a fair warning that it’s bad with the
title itself. If you decide to watch it based on that, Godspeed.
10. I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
Starting off with a doozy. First of all, I Know What You Did Last Summer probably
only exists because of the success of Scream
(both movies written by the same screenwriter), which rekindled interest in
the slasher genre, but Scream is one
of those excellent one-word titles that’s ambiguous enough to be intriguing but
also telling enough to indicate the genre. I
Know What You Did Last Summer is almost a spoiler? I guess? But then
tacking on “Still” for the sequel just makes it sound worse, and makes it even
more too long. The third film, I’ll
Always Know What You Did Last Summer, is pretty bad too, but after the first
and second title, is it really a surprise?
9. Gigli
I’m still not sure how to say this one. Looks like giggly? All
I know is it doesn’t tell you a damn thing about the movie, but it didn’t
really matter back when it came out in 2003, because everyone knew it was a
rom-com starring then-real-life-couple Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck (A.K.A Bennifer).
The movie ended up being one of the worst of all-time, according to many
critics, which I can’t attest to that, having never seen it, as a connoisseur of
titles, I agree it’s one of the worst in that respect.
8. 2 Fast, 2 Furious
The Fast and Furious
franchise has a weird history of titles, but this second one is the dumbest to
me. Okay, to be fair, at least it indicates it’s the second movie, unlike
entries #3 (Fast and Furious: Tokyo Drift)
and #4 (Fast and Furious, dropping “the”
and “the”), but it has to say “2” two times? I’m no math expert but doesn’t
that add up to four? It just sounds like a parody title.
7. eXistenZ
Go home, movie title, you’re drunk. Fact: misspelling a word
doesn’t come off as clever. I’ve never actually seen this David Cronenberg body
horror film, but would like to, based on the premise—not so much based on the
title. It’s one thing to misspell a word, but to throw in some capitals for
seemingly no reason? That’s crossing the line.
6. Blacula/Blackenstein

5. The Dark Knight Rises
You might be surprised to see this one on here, but it’s
bugged me ever since I heard it announced—in fact, it’s the whole reason I came
up with this list. I was and still am puzzled by this title choice, given that
it’s nearly identical to the second entry in the trilogy, only with Rises added at the end. But really, didn’t
the titular Dark Knight “rise” in the second movie, more than he did in the
third? Why didn’t they just go with The
Dark Knight Returns, like the comic book title? Or what about Batman Ends? It was common knowledge
this would be the last of the three Nolan Batman movies, and the first one was
called Batman Begins, now it ends!
But no, they went with a repetitious, lame title that, ironically enough, kind
of mirrored what the movie ended up being: repetitious from last time, and lame
compared to the previous entry.
4. Terminator Genisys
Now we’re getting into really terrible title territory (say
that ten times fast). As I’ve already said, spelling a word wrong in a title
was never cool, and never will be cool. This was the first sign of trouble for
the Terminator sequel/reboot/remake (remakequelboot?)
and the jokes at this title’s expense ended up being the best things about the
movie. Terminator: Jenny Smith, Terminator: Genishit, and Terminator: Mega Drive are my personal
favourites.
3. John Carter

2. Troll 2
This title is deceptively stupid. You might be thinking,
hey, c’mon, what’s wrong with this? On the surface? Nothing. But give the movie
a watch, and you’ll discover this really is one of the worst movies ever made,
and while many will say it’s one of the best worst movies ever (so bad it’s
good) it’s mostly just boring. But the first big fail is that there are no
trolls in the movie. They’re called Goblins. And the second big fail, is it has
nothing to do with the first Troll movie.
So this basic movie title essentially fails at everything. It just doesn’t seem
like it, upon first look.
1. Star Wars titles

I know these titles don’t really matter, and it’s just
George Lucas paying tribute to the old adventure serials that inspired him in
the first place, but titles are important, and just the title Star Wars is perfect on its own, there
isn’t really a need for the additional titles. Imagine if it was just Star Wars I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII,
etc. and that’s it. What’s wrong with that?
Does the Star Wars
series deserve this top spot for worst movie title? Probably not, so I’ll throw
one more in as a bonus.
The REAL #1 worst
movie title:
The 41 Year-Old Virgin Who Knocked Up Sarah Marshall and Felt Superbad
About It

No comments:
Post a Comment