Inspired by the linked XKCD. Using 60% instead of 50% because that’s an easy filter to apply on rottentomatoes.
I’ll go first: I think “Sherlock Holmes: A game of Shadows” was awesome, from the plot to the characters ,and especially how they used screen-play to highlight how Sherlocks head works in these absurd ways.
Every person who likes horror movies can probably name a few examples. Horror movies are somehow really weirdly understood by a lot of people, including critics. Or perhaps I watch them for the wrong reasons, I don’t know.
I thought this would be hard but them I read your comment. I posted a list of my favorite horror movies a week or so ago and I wonder how many can fit here?
Are you willing to provide a few examples of horror movies that fit the description?
47 Meters Down, A Cure for Wellness, A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010 Remake), All the Boys Love Mandy Lane, Blair Witch, Contracted, Creep, Darkness Falls, Devil, Doom, Don’t Knock Twice, Eli, Gothika, Hansel & Gretel Witch Hunters, …
There are many more.
I have no idea what is wrong with my brain, but each of these movies generally entertained me much more than movies with a significantly higher rating on Rotten Tomatoes. But critics give movies like Blair Witch 38 % and Avatar 82 %.
Edit: removed Friday the 13th and Halloween The Curse of Michael Myers because they’re pre 2000.
Dolly Dearest (1991). Critically and Viewer panned mainly because it was seen as a Child’s Play knock off. It’s definitely deserving of a higher rating and it’s story is actually very intriguing.
Blue Sunshine (1978). Originally highly rated. New rating from views have dropped its score to less than 50% despite its Cult status.
Body Melt (1994). Another one where the critics are right and the viewers are wrong.
A Bucket of Blood (1959). While it’s balanced now. This is a good example of the swinging opinions of viewers. 2 years ago the view rating was much lower, or maybe it was the IMDB rating that was sub 4 stars.
Ebola Syndrome (1996) is the opposite. Originally panned by everyone. It’s currently being seen as campy and the rating shot up to 69%. It even supports a Comedy tag, despite no comedy in the movie.
Different person and I keep saying it, but Silent Hill was a really good movie that got horrible reviews (even among Horror fans).
I liked it from the start! But then I was starved for Silent Hill by then.
I also thought horror would be an easy genre for this, but after scrolling through the last ~50 movies in my watchlist I only managed to find a single one that matched the description: Dark Skies (2013).
Yeah, like Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. Felt like they nailed both the intro and final scene.
Some would argue that horror falls into the “so bad it’s good” category, but there’s a huge chasm between this movie and things like The Room or Plan 9.
Yeah, and there are horror movies that are disliked by the Horror fandom for random reasons, and they REALLY get bad reviews regardless of entertainment value. My first knee-jerk had been Silent Hill. It betrayed its legendary IP and didn’t have any mainstream value… But it LOVED it.