The Star Malaysia - Star2

Worst films of 2017

- From Jumanji and junkies to Michael Fassbender and Matt Damon, here are 10 films critics hated. The Emoji Movie didn’t resonate well with critics and audiences in 2017. — Sony Pictures Star2

WHEN a movie misfires, sometimes it’s simply a good idea gone wrong. More often, though, it’s a terrible idea whose execution reveals just how threadbare the concept really was – and, by extension, the cynical and/or inept process that would greenlight such a movie to begin with. They can’t all be masterpiec­es, but do bad movies have to be so ... demoralisi­ng?

1. Trespass Against Us:

It’s a wackadoo drama that hardly anyone saw or cared about, yet this degree of in-your-face ineptitude simply can’t be allowed to go unrecognis­ed. Michael Fassbender and Brendan Gleeson play father-andson criminals who live in a makeshift domestic trailer camp, where every moment consists of flamboyant bickering nonsense. The movie unfolds in a kitchen-sink-ofthe-absurd nether zone somewhere between sitcom and Samuel Beckett, as if staged by Guy Ritchie with a broken motor.

2. Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle:

This year, the recycledfr­anchise-blockbuste­r system saved the worst for last. A quartet of high schoolers get sucked into a videogame version of Jumanji, which means they’re stranded for two hours in a generic jungle, transforme­d, for no particular reason, into Dwayne Johnson, Kevin Hart, Jack Black, and Karen Gillan. The four act out squabbling bits and pieces of what might be the lamest Indiana Jones sequel ever imagined.

3. The Book Of Henry:

Did director Colin Trevorrow get fired off of Star Wars: Episode IX because of the scathing reviews that greeted his cloying and absurd boy-genius disease-of-the-week heart-tugger? That wasn’t the stated reason, yet it’s hard to shake the suspicion that this dud didn’t help his cause. It’s the tale of an 11-year-old brainiac who lays a trap for a child abuser, all as a way to let the folks around him grieve. It’s never clear whether we should be laughing, crying, or waving a white flag.

4. Slack Bay:

There’s a microscopi­c sliver of cinephiles who celebrate the fact that the French director Bruno Dumont is no longer making aridly obtuse misanthrop­ic cosmic statements like “Humanite” and is now making aridly abstruse misanthrop­ic “comedies” like this one. But to call that an artistic leap forward would be like saying that waterboard­ing is more tolerable when accompanie­d by a laugh track.

5. T2: Trainspott­ing:

Director Danny Boyle made a fatal mistake when he turned this sequel into a tale of middle-aged anomie, stripping it of energy, recklessne­ss, and – except for one token scene – drugs. Trainspott­ing was a great movie because it found a degraded joy in throwing your life away. But T2 doesn’t choose life – it chooses hollow moping by people with nothing left to lose.

Gleiberman

1. Nocturama:

Perhaps French director Bertrand Bonello sensed something in the air when he hatched this portrait of a bunch of disaffecte­d young hipsters who coordinate a terrorist attack, then hide out in a Paris department store watching the aftermath unfold on the news, like so many blase models in a provocativ­e fashion commercial. Rather than scrapping (or at least adapting) his rawnerve concept after the Bataclan shooting, Bonello withholds any relevant insights or social critique.

– Owen

It’s an insult not only to France, but to terrorists as well, who can be accused of many things, but never of lacking conviction­s.

2. The Emoji Movie:

What’s next? Selfie Stick: The Movie? A transparen­tly cynical cash-grab inspired by those little yellow smileys that vaguely correspond to actual human emotions, this cartoon was a blatant rip-off of Inside Out, offering some generic ”be yourself” message while teaching kids they need phones to be cool/attractive to the opposite sex.

3. Fist Fight:

Whoever thought it was a good idea to build a movie around a misunderst­anding between two high-school teachers that escalates into an epic oncampus brawl clearly doesn’t have children – or else probably lets them play with loaded weapons around the house. American movies are already far too cavalier about violence, and a comedy that encourages it in such an inappropri­ate context isn’t funny; it’s downright irresponsi­ble.

4. The Snowman:

Mister Police, someone’s going to “movie jail” over this abominatio­n, which Martin Scorsese was attached to direct at one point. The honours ultimately went to Tomas Alfredson, who claims that scheduling problems are to blame for this badly miscalcula­ted Jo Nesbo adaptation, featuring a lame serial killer who signs his crimes by building a snowman in his victims’ front yards.

5. Downsizing:

Whereas Alexander Payne makes delightful­ly insightful small movies, this one’s a massive disappoint­ment, stemming from the fact that his abilities (so appealing in miniature) don’t scale well to a big-budget, high-concept studio project. Based on a faulty premise (that statushung­ry humans would voluntaril­y agree to shrink themselves), this misbegotte­n satire is woefully artless from the opening shot and features a charisma-less lead performanc­e from Matt Damon, whose character just accepts being ditched by his wife, when the film ought to be about trying to win her back. – Peter Debruge/Reuters

Watch out for our pick of the best in movies, music and TV as well as a look-back in pop culture in the year that was in tomorrow.

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