Watching movies is meant to be a joyful experience, even if you’re watching a tense thriller. The point is to have a good time, hence why films are part of the entertainment business. But what happens when a movie isn’t something enjoyable, but something you have to endure?

This is the topic for today: movies that are so hard to get through, people have walked out of cinemas out of sheer frustration. And not because they’re controversial; they’re just plain bad. If you’re planning a movie night, these are the movies to avoid. Or, if you’re brave, these are the movies to endure.

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Cats

Cats became infamous less for its story than for its uncanny visual effects, erratic tone, and baffling adaptation choices that left viewers treating it more like a curiosity than a full sit-down watch.

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Movie 43

Its anthology format, wildly uneven sketches, and intentionally gross-out humor gave Movie 43 a reputation as something often talked about more than actually finished.

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Battlefield Earth

Critics and audiences alike mocked its Dutch angles, awkward performances, and bloated runtime, helping Battlefield Earth become shorthand for movies people abandoned out of frustration.

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The Last Airbender

The heavily criticized adaptation quickly became known for awkward exposition, stiff performances, and disappointed fans who struggled with how far it drifted from beloved source material.

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Dragonball Evolution

Long criticized by fans of the original manga and anime, the movie became notorious for flattening major characters and delivering a product that no one liked, even if you knew nothing about the source material.

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The Emoji Movie

Its corporate premise and critical backlash made The Emoji Movie a common punchline, with many remembering the concept more vividly than the actual full viewing experience.

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Son of the Mask

As a follow-up to a hugely recognizable comedy, Son of the Mask became infamous for chaotic CGI, strange humor, and poor reception, making it one of those sequels many people know by reputation more than by finishing it.

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Gigli

Production gossip and brutal reviews often overshadowed the film itself, turning Gigli into one of Hollywood’s most famous flops that many know by reputation alone.

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Foodfight!

Technical problems, unfinished-looking animation, and years of troubled production made Foodfight! notorious as a bizarre disaster many sampled more than fully consumed.

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Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore

Even as a family sequel, it gained little cultural footprint and often gets cited as one of those studio follow-ups most people forgot existed at all.

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The Love Guru

The Mike Myers comedy drew criticism for repetitive humor and uncomfortable jokes, quickly becoming better known for backlash than for lasting audience affection.

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Batman & Robin

Its toyetic excess, puns, and exaggerated camp eventually made it a cult curiosity, but for years it represented blockbuster overload at its most exhausting.

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Norbit

Its heavy prosthetic comedy and divisive humor helped make Norbit one of those hits many people remember existing, while fewer passionately defend revisiting it.

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After Earth

The sci-fi survival story is a case of stiff pacing and flat emotional impact, leaving it remembered more as a disappointment than a must-finish experience.

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Transformers: The Last Knight

Even within a huge franchise, The Last Knight became especially criticized for chaotic plotting, mythology overload, and a runtime many viewers found exhausting to sit through.

The post 15 Movies We Don’t Believe Anyone Actually Watched All the Way Through appeared first on Den of Geek.

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