Sometimes there are movies that everyone loves, and you don’t. I’m generally pretty open-minded about most movies (it helps to be in this business), and I can usually find something I like in almost every movie. There are, however, some movies that I don’t like. These aren’t all “hot takes.” For most of them, I completely appreciate the quality of the movie in question; they just don’t land with me on a personal level.
This is a “me problem” most of the time, but still, I wanted to put this list together to talk about movies everyone loves, but have never done anything for me, so without further ado, let’s get into it!
The Shawshank Redemption
The Shawshank Redemption is generally considered one of, if not the, best movies of the 1990s by many people. The Frank Darabont-directed prison movie, based on a book by Stephen King and starring Morgan Freeman and Tim Robbins, is beloved by many, especially those people (like me) who watched it on cable all the time in the ’90s. The thing is, I just don’t like it. Maybe it’s because of the prison element, or that it’s a little too… I don’t know… cheesy to me. It doesn’t work for me.
best war movies ever, it’s even thought of as one of the best films of all time. I couldn’t disagree more with those assessments. This might be a hot take, but I find it boring. Do we really need to see a Russian-Orthodox wedding as it happens? The history is dubious at best. There is nothing that ties Russian Roulette to POW camps in Vietnam in actual history. While the performances are amazing from the entire cast, the movie, with a runtime of 184 minutes, is about 3 hours too long.
stickler for good history in a movie about historical events, that’s not what bothers me about this one. For me, the movie just looks and feels incredibly cheesy.
Boogie Nights, There Will Be Blood, Hard Eight, and Inherent Vice are all movies you can watch over and over) or I really don’t like them at all, like Magnolia. I remember being so excited to see his follow-up to Boogie Nights in the theater and walking away disappointed and, honestly, pretty bored by the movie.
Scarface has to be one of the most dated movies of all time. Talk about cheesy! Everything from Miami in the ’80s to the score by the legendary Giorgio Moroder all feels like they are trapped in time – and not in a good way. Though some might disagree, it’s also a really boring movie for most of it. Sure, the action scenes are classics, but Al Pacino’s weird accent ruins even some of the best lines for me.
Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, as I was a preteen when it came it. It is a movie directed right at the audience I was a part of when it became a smash hit in 1980. I never really liked it, even then. The humor doesn’t land for me at all. I do like the animation, but other than that, it’s just not for me.
Daredevil, then on Netflix, now part of the MCU on Disney+. The style of Sin City does little for me, and I just couldn’t get past that.
Robert Redford and Paul Newman, and The Sting, which I first saw years before seeing Butch and Sundance, is still one of my all-time favorite movies. I’m also a huge fan of Westerns, and despite this being considered one of the best Westerns of all time, I’ve never been able to connect with this one. I’ve tried over the years to get into it, but I end up turning it off every time.
Reservoir Dogs is one of my all-time favorites, and Once Upon A Time In Hollywood is an example where I think Tarantino nailed the alternate history in the story he was telling. Inglourious Basterds is the opposite of that. Outside of the incredible opening scene with Christoph Waltz’s amazing performance, the movie is just too silly for me, and the ending drives me nuts. I do secretly love Brad Pitt’s wacky accent.
rank the MCU movies, Captain America: The Winter Soldier is often near the top, or at least in the top third of all the movies. For me, though, it’s way down the list. But what do I know? I love Iron Man 2, and everyone else hates that one.
epic shootout is amazing, and I remember all too well what a huge deal it was that Al Pacino and Robert De Niro were appearing in scenes together in a movie for the first time. That novelty has worn off, and all we’re left with is some silly dialogue now.
Gen X nostalgia, and that’s my generation. I had to grow up in an America drenched in Baby Boomer nostalgia, and no movie represents that quite like The Big Chill. That said, I will always be grateful for the movie introducing me to Motown with its fantastic soundtrack.
referenced in Ready Player One, but it still just wasn’t for me.
the fake baby totally took me out of the movie, and I never really recovered.
never watch it again; it’s just a bland movie that I’ll never understand how it won so many awards or was so popular at the time. It’s a stellar cast, to be sure, but it seems only to serve one purpose: to make people cry. That isn’t my kind of movie.