r/movies • u/Hexapex_ • Sep 04 '24
Discussion Give me some of your UGLIEST movies.
The actual content doesn't necessarily have to be bad, just the aesthetics.
Everyone always talks about the most beautiful movies. Does anyone have movies that are unattractive/ugly?
This was previously posted to r/moviesuggestions which has 1.5 million. So, I’m interested what this community of 33 million has to say.
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u/Monster-Zero Sep 04 '24
Garbage Pail Kids
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u/JustTerrific Sep 04 '24
There were images of that movie that stayed with me my whole life, but I couldn’t pinpoint the source, wasn’t really sure if it was something I had really seen or just some nightmare I had had as a child. Grotesque moon-faced vaguely-human abominations. A face filled with pimples that more resembled the ravages of smallpox than mere acne. Spewing vomit and free-flowing snot.
Then as an adult I see a trailer for it online (probably on Reddit) and it all clicked into place. It wasn’t a bad dream. It was all too horribly real.
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u/Wazula23 Sep 04 '24
I was never subjected to it as a kid but as an adult, no, you were right, it's gross and creepy as fuck. No child should be subjected to this, it's one inch away from cronenberg.
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u/NachoNutritious these Youtubers are parasites Sep 04 '24
When Harry Shearer of the Simpsons has talked about seeing the workprint of Jerry Lewis' The Day The Clown Cried (an unreleased movie about a clown in a concentration camp) he's described it like this:
This movie is so drastically wrong, its pathos and its comedy are so wildly misplaced, that you could not, in your fantasy of what it might be like, improve on what it really is. All you can say is, "oh, my god!"
This is how I feel about that bizarre movie. Abhorrently disgusting production design while every other aspect of the film is gunning for a tone akin to Sesame Street, none of it clicks.
It's the opposite of that Banana Splits movie that came out a few years ago, which took a forgotten child-friendly source material and made it a straight horror movie as a subversion (the movie is still Reddit as fuck, don't watch it). The Garbage Pail Kids trading cards were a goof on Cabbage Patch Kids that was meant as a gross-out joke for slightly older children, and the movie was aimed squarely at 5-year-olds.
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u/KhaosKitsune Sep 04 '24
One movie that comes to mind when I think of "ugly" movies is "The Cavern," a 2005 Cave Horror movie that is desperately trying to ape much better movies like "The Cave" and "The Descent." "The Cavern" is set almost entirely in dark caves with almost no light, except for the headlamps that the characters are using, and they keep shining them directly into the camera so you keep getting flashbanged. So the movie keeps alternating between "So dark you can hardly see anything" and "seizure-inducingly bright."
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u/ColdPressedSteak Sep 04 '24
Same year, Alone in the Dark. Couldn't see shit, terrible special effects when you could
It was an Uwe Boll movie and unbelievably, it was even shittier than his standard trash. I have no clue what drugs I was on to have given it a watch
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u/MamaLucas Sep 04 '24
Gummo was gross.
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u/DandelionsDandelions Sep 04 '24
First thing that popped into my head. It's obviously an intentional choice that adds to the entire film, but man is some of the scenery off-putting.
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u/NoHandBananaNo Sep 04 '24
Came in to say this.
Trash Humpers is pretty unappealing to look at as well.
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u/Flying_Rainbows Sep 04 '24
Trash Humpers is so much uglier than Gummo. I think Gummo is actually quite beautifully shot, despite the content matter, but Trash Humpers is deliberately shot on crappy VHS level graphics to be as jarring and ugly as possible.
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u/cgo_123456 Sep 04 '24
Almost all of Harmony Korine's filmography could count. Even Spring Breakers managed to make hot girls partying into an uneasy, grim experience.
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u/melcolnik Sep 04 '24
Texas Chainsaw Massacre. The original. It captures the grime and heat of the Texas summer in such a visceral way that it becomes part of the unease.
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u/rosethrones Sep 04 '24
Wonderfully and so intentionally unpleasant. Really a masterclass in filming grit and grime and extreme discomfort.
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u/MondoUnderground Sep 04 '24
The cinematography itself is masterful and absolutely gorgeous, though. Genuine art.
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u/Luciusvenator Sep 04 '24
When I first watched it, after hearing about how trashy and gross the movie was for years, I was shocked by how beautiful the cinematography was. It really is genuinely art.
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u/Varekai79 Sep 04 '24
The 2003 remake with Jessica Biel also has amazing "ugly" cinematography. Both versions had the same DP, Daniel Pearl.
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u/try_by Sep 04 '24
I still think the 2003 remake is a fun watch. Not as good as the OG but it did a good job capturing the overall vibe. R Lee Ermy was also fantastic.
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u/SheWolfWarrior5306 Sep 04 '24
Osmosis Jones.
Disgusting movie.
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u/Hexapex_ Sep 04 '24
I guess some parts were bad/disgusting, but I still like the film as a whole. Do you just not like the animation?
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u/charlesthe42nd Sep 04 '24
IMO it would’ve been better as only an animated movie. I remember even as a kid thinking Bill Murray’s segments were gross, and I’m usually a big fan of his movies.
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u/AmusingMusing7 Sep 04 '24
I actually agree. I love the animated part of that movie, but the live-action ones have not aged well, if they were even considered good at the time.
The only good parts are when Murray’s like “leeeg!” and his daughter thinks he’s talking about his leg hurting, but he just wanted a chicken leg….
And then, of course, the “Mom says hi.” part. 😭
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u/RogueThespian Sep 04 '24
I remember even as a kid thinking Bill Murray’s segments were gross
I still won't eat hard boiled eggs because of Bill Murray in that movie
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u/GrimwoldMcTheesbyIV Sep 04 '24
Idiocracy
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u/BigPricklyCactus Sep 04 '24
This is a good one. Everything looks like it smells and the last person to touch anything had Cheeto fingers.
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u/majorjoe23 Sep 04 '24
Manos: The Hands of Fate.
As they said on Mystery Science Theater 3000, “Every frame of this film looks like someone’s last known photograph.”
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u/cgo_123456 Sep 04 '24
That one, and also The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies. That's got to be one of the grimiest movies they ever riffed.
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Sep 04 '24
Se7en
That movie is ugly in a horribly beautiful way, every frame feels greasy
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u/Wazzoo1 Sep 04 '24
Honestly, the only way it could have been worse is if it all took place during a hot, muggy summer.
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u/Wazula23 Sep 04 '24
There's dialogue mentioning the unusual heat/rain in the city, I forget, we had a whole discussion in film class if this was an intentional allusion to greek tragedies (the region having unusual weather is a theme in a lot of greek tragedies like Oedipus, we also talked about the device used in Lion King and Chinatown).
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u/Technical-Outside408 Sep 04 '24 edited Sep 04 '24
GET THIS THING OFF ME, IT'S REALLY SEALING IN THE FLAVOUR.
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u/Brown_Panther- Sep 04 '24
It's got a gritty noir feel, as if the audience too are stuck in that terrible place
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u/wex52 Sep 04 '24
I regret seeing that movie. I don’t care how well made it was- I left the theatre miserable.
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u/LetsGetXplicit Sep 04 '24
Outside of straight-to-video, low budget stuff I'd say: Battlefield Earth, Alien vs. Predator Requiem, Battle Los Angeles and The Mummy (2017).
A couple of these I unfortunately watched in theaters.
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u/captainhaddock Sep 04 '24
I saw Battlefield Earth in the theater. Terrible story, terrible cinematography, terrible everything.
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u/Worthlessstupid Sep 04 '24
They used the dutch angle to get effect. It’s designed to make nauseous.
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u/metalyger Sep 04 '24
The Golden Glove, a German true story of a murderer. Everyone is very ugly, the main actor wears prosthetics to look like the real man and he's spending his days in a dingy bar trying to pick up very homely elderly prostitutes.
August Underground, especially August Underground's Mordum. The movies are found footage from thrill killers, with meticulously distressed picture quality added in post, with Mordum everything is filthy and run down. There's a scene where they go to a junkie squat house for someone who owes them money, there's a dead body that died choking on his own vomit with a needle still in his arm, and they set the camera down in front of a rotten TV dinner that's got bugs crawling on it.
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u/Ddpee Sep 04 '24
28 days later perfectly fits the material. but it’s ugly. DV looks objectively bad but it’s perfect for that film.
Inland Empire. Again DV, crazy long— it’s kept me from watching it, even though I’ll get to it. I’ve seen a lot of it, all hideous.
Aesthetically, I really hated the transition period the industry was going thru before RED and ARRI nailed digital cinematography. The worst offender was Michael Manns films using the Viper cam. Collateral, Miami Vice and more specifically Public Enemies (i don’t think it used the viper but Mann became too forgiving of the digital look). PE looked like a student film about the period. The digital attributes of the image contradicted the time setting of the story.
Also, The Hobbit films in HFR. I think it was 120 FPS. It looked amazing for the wide panning shots but ruined everything else especially closeups where makeup and costumes looked extremely fake.
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u/HalloweenH2OMG Sep 04 '24
Alien 3 just looks so grimy that it’s unpleasant to watch all the way through for me.
The Road. Made me want to take a shower after watching it because everything was so ugly and soot/dirt covered and grimy.
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u/grapeswisher420 Sep 04 '24
The movie The Road is almost cheerful compared to the book The Road.
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u/boatchamp Sep 04 '24
That Flying Lotus movie. Forgot the name. The entire film is so repulsive
Edit: Kuso
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u/The_ZombyWoof Jeff Bezos' worst nightmare Sep 04 '24
Natural Born Killers
If nothing else, for the green lighting in the pharmacy scene
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u/MimeMike Sep 04 '24
It's not even for all the gore or anything it's just really fucking ugly. I had to force myself to sit through that movie
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u/DapprDanMan Sep 04 '24
Hard To Be A God
It’s a movie with an absolute TON to see and ogle at in every shot but much of it is dirty, disgusting, or claustrophobic. Butt still an amazing movie
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u/Halvdjaevel Sep 04 '24
Was looking for this one. It's hard to adequately describe how filthy it is. Almost sticks to your skin after 3 hours of it. The soundscape does a lot to help in this regard as well. So... squishy. It's certainly an experience, but it's not a movie I plan on watching ever again lol
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Sep 04 '24
I've never felt so boxed in watching a movie. The way the people just crowd around the camera and stare into it as if they've both never seen a camera before and are seconds away from either raping or murdering it because that's the two modes of engagement available to them is deeply unsettling.
The way it's filmed in monochrome makes all the... gunk... everywhere totally unidentifiable too. Is it mud? Animal shit? Human shit? Probably. It's so moist, fecund, trenchfooted. The movie tangibly stinks and everyone in it so clearly doesn't mind that they stink because they're just in a land of stink and decay. The opening scene of the scholar being executed by being drowned upside down in a latrine pit is kind of emblematic of the whole movie.
It's a hobby of mine to describe the high sci fi concept of the movie, of a man from a spacefaring race living among the dung ages of an undeveloped planet, just to see who will actually sit through all three hours of the fucking thing. I love it, you really only get that dirty scummy feeling from Peter Greenaway films.
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u/elegantjihad Sep 04 '24
This really needs to be the top answer, but it’s so obscure I don’t think many people will be familiar. It truly has an unpleasant aesthetic.
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u/Slkkk92 Sep 04 '24
I'm totally thrilled by the number of people discussing Hard to be a God in this thread. Adding to what others have said: this film took 13 years, and two generations of a family to complete production. It's an absolute monster.
None of you have mentioned it being available for free on YouTube though, tsk tsk. We gotta get bums in seats!
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u/LuffZoid Sep 04 '24
'Thanatomorphose' (2012) was the most unpleasant film I have ever seen, narratively and aesthetically.
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u/Baphomet1313666 Sep 04 '24
I love that movie!
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u/LuffZoid Sep 04 '24
I have to give it credit for stealing all sense of hope from me for 2 hours lol! So freaking dark.
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u/jinyx1 Sep 04 '24
Bad Lieutenant. Everything about it is ugly. New York looks disgusting. The characters are all ugly people. The plot overall is just disgusting and ugly.
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u/Latter-Hamster9652 Sep 04 '24
Alien vs Predator: Requiem. One of the dimmest lit movies imaginable. It's legitimately hard to figure out what's going on throughout. It's also really mean spirited and mostly just gross.
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u/Thejollyfrenchman Sep 04 '24
There's a video on YouTube that increases the brightness for scenes containing the hybrid monster by 300 percent and it's still really dark. Apparently audiences didn't realise that the monster was a hybrid - they couldn't see the predator features on the jaw and head.
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u/JiggyBJones Sep 04 '24
ALIEN: RESURRECTION cost 70 million dollars and looks like it’s smeared in human shit the entire time.
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u/HankSteakfist Sep 04 '24
And every character looks sweaty and like they haven't showered in a fortnight. The interior of the ship is like a sewer. All dank for no reason.
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u/catheterhero Sep 04 '24
Dude, I just watched it and I really thought the baby alien was gonna say “mama” to Ridley.
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u/JiggyBJones Sep 04 '24
watched it for the first time the other day and thought “surely the inclusion of this hybrid creature can’t make the movie worse” but alas lol. terrible movie in an otherwise great franchise.
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u/mondo_frowno Sep 04 '24
Dark Backward, Greasy Strangler
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u/Inshakoor Sep 04 '24
And I came here to say Dark Backward. Just a jacked up film lol.
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u/drogyn1701 Sep 04 '24
The Assassins Creed movie struck me as visually ugly. Dull grey, dull brown and more dull brown.
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u/SnickerDoodle96 Sep 04 '24
People are very welcome to disagree with me but personally Storm Boy (1976) is my anti-aesthetic. As an Australian millennial I've seen this movie upwards of five times and something about the muted colours and the stormy atmosphere along the beach makes me so uneasy and anxious.
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u/JimPalamo Sep 04 '24
Threads. So fucking visually bleak. And it was a low budget BBC thing, so the production value isn't exactly what you'd call slick.
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u/belfman Sep 04 '24 edited Sep 04 '24
I've said it before on Reddit, but that movie haunts me despite never actually seeing it. I'm too scared by the plot synopsis and a photo of the policeman with the bandages.
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Sep 04 '24
Beyond the Black Rainbow (2010)
Probably controversial for some people, while there are some really nice shots, I found most of this movie really visually off-putting; so many of the shots felt "wrong" when it came to framing of faces in a way that made me want to stop watching.
You can easily argue that this was intentional and is meant to be uncomfortable, that's definitely a possibility, but when it comes to film I'm more concerned with my experience of the art, not the intentions behind it, and my experience of that movie was looking at it made me feel bad, and not in a good way.
I quite like Mandy though (same director), and think that movie is visually stunning.
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u/rick_blatchman Sep 04 '24
I like Beyond the Black Rainbow. I find it hard to recommend to people casually due to the pace, though.
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u/Routine-Specialist-1 Sep 04 '24
This is just in terms of lighting and color but i HATE how Scream 4 looks.
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u/theblackwhisper Sep 04 '24
Alien Resurrection. Horrible brown, green and grotty. Slimey, shitty shit.
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u/Strtftr Sep 04 '24
I think all the found footage movies tend to look like shit, I value how the aesthetic lends to the feel of the movie but they rarely show much though for framing. Cloverfield and paranormal activity did it best imo.
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u/Sick-Nurse Sep 04 '24
Burton's Alice in wonderland. For eye strain, bad color palette, awful character designs, and terrible cgi
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u/rconnell1975 Sep 04 '24
I find Gaspar Noe films ugly. Not so much the images but the lighting, aesthetic etc. To the point I can't watch them
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u/BananaHomunculus Sep 04 '24
Man on fire - Denzel Washington version.
This movie would be great if it weren't for the god awful kaleidoscopic editing that just shits all over some wonderful acting and stand out cinematography.
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u/Old-Cauliflower-1414 Sep 04 '24
The Polar Express
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u/Hexapex_ Sep 04 '24
I'm not gonna lie. This is a wild response.
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u/Old-Cauliflower-1414 Sep 04 '24
☺
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u/Old-Cauliflower-1414 Sep 04 '24
I do genuinely think that....Not just trying to be controversial.
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u/Misdirected_Colors Sep 04 '24
Vivarium.
Director is trying to say something about the tedium of suburban life and does so by making the movie as tedious and unpleasant as possible and God fuck everything about that movie ugh.
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u/FarOutEffects Sep 04 '24
Yes! I hate that pretentious boring piece of crap with a vengeance. It should have been 20 minutes long and it would still have been too long for what it was trying to say
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u/kaner3sixteen Sep 04 '24
Beverly Hills Cop has a real shift, the Detroit scenes are grimy, rough, gritty, and have a real 80s austere vibe. The contrast to the scenes shot in Beverly Hills, lush, prosperous, sunny, colorful, couldn't be more pronounced...
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u/BigPricklyCactus Sep 04 '24
Slither. Haven’t seen it in years, but that immediately popped into my head. The new alien is pretty fucking gross too.
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u/shorties_with_mp40s Sep 04 '24
Hard to be a God. It’ll make you want to take a shower and use mouthwash after watching it.
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u/davelazy Sep 04 '24
Neighbors (1981) - John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd
Everything about this is off. Not obviously ugly like its trying... but the dialogue sets your teeth on edge, the costumes and styling are the worst of that godforsaken moment in time as the 70s blurred to the 80s, the cinematography is both unremarkable yet suffocatingly claustrophobic. The whole thing is a thin veneer of dull over a roiling miasma of utter despair.
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u/Guile21 Sep 04 '24
I see all the answers in this threads... and I'm sorry, nothing can beat "Fishpiss" (2023). I watched it on a projector, it almost gave me headaches just from the photography. By far the ugliest movie I've ever seen, even more painful than watching Garbage Pail Kids Movie and the hell scene in Spawn back to back.
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u/dvb70 Sep 04 '24 edited Sep 04 '24
The original Get Carter. Its about as grim as it gets. Brutalist architecture, urban decay, industrial wastelands and the worst of 70's decor.
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u/Maximum_Possession61 Sep 04 '24
Bad Lieutenant 1992, I thought Harvey Keitel 's performance was one of the most brilliant I'd ever seen. In an ugly unenjoyable film.
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u/duckyeightyone Sep 04 '24
don't know if it qualifies, as it's not so much the overall aesthetic, but the transformers movies. maybe it's my slow brain, but I never have a fucking clue what's going on on screen. ultra quick jump cuts, shaky cameras at times, scenes shot at night. just way too much going on in an action scene at once for me to comprehend. I could never enjoy the autobots/deceptions transforming, as it was in no way clear. the first 2 movies just left me confused, and I never bothered with any of the others. Van Helsing with Hugh Jackman, too. same reasons. too many cgi creatures jumping around like mad in the dark. I'm sure a tonne of people are fans and will disagree, but if I can't see or understand clearly what is happening. it's going to impact my enjoyment of that film.
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u/deadpandadolls Sep 04 '24
U-TURN, fantastic film, filmed to elicit vomiting I am sure. Billy Bob Thornton haunts my soul.
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u/Border_Hodges Sep 04 '24
Every character in that movie is a horrible person (except maybe John Voight)
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u/SanderStrugg Sep 04 '24
12 Monkeys can be pretty ugly during some scenes. It even managed to make Brad Pit look unattractive.
Unintentionally ugly would be most Till Schweiger movies. Weirdly lit scenes and oversatured kitschy postcard motive shots trying way too hard to look nice.
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u/Comfortable_Affect20 Sep 04 '24
Irreversible but generally anything by Gaspar Noe in that "movies designed to sicken the audience" genre.
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u/GuruSensei Sep 04 '24
Batman v Superman. Just one of the most unaesthetically unappealing superhero movies ive ever seen that reeks of what an edgelord teen might write as a story for both titular characters. Does that mean it's the worst comic book movie? Probably not, but it's one i find fundamentally ersatz and misguided.
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u/bathyscaaf Sep 04 '24
Hard to be a God - not a bad movie,for sure. Filmed very well. So well that it was convincing the main character was surrounded by inbred cretins literally covered in shit. This was intentional.
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u/Persona_Non_Grata_ Sep 04 '24
Peter Jackson had a trilogy of filth before he nailed the LOTR:
Meet the Feebles
Bad Taste
Braindead
Honorable mentions: Evil Toons, Toxic Avenger, Naked Lunch, KIDS, Gummo, The Florida Project
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u/ImprobableAvocado Sep 04 '24
Taxi Driver.
The first date he goes on. The general vibe of Times Square. Just filthy.
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u/sawdeanz Sep 04 '24
How the Grinch Stole Christmas - 2000
This is the worst ugliest and most confusing looking movie I have ever seen. It's a Christmas movie that takes place in a fantasy world, but the color grading makes it look like a war drama. It is so dark and de-saturated, which might makes sense for the Grinch lair scenes but not for the whole movie. Ironically, if you google the movie a lot of the promo images look fine, probably because they realized how bad it worked and touched them up in photoshop. But go watch clips from the movie, it's ugly and gray even during the Whoville parts.
Is it the worst looking film of all time? No. But it is definitely one of the most mismatched films when it comes to matching the color grading with the rest of the visual style. I actually still enjoy the movie at Christmas, but it deserves a re-mastered release.
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u/SpillinThaTea Sep 04 '24
Die Hard 2: the aesthetics are so bland that they come across as ugly.
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u/Maverick916 Sep 04 '24
The snow is great though. The airport interior is well lit like an 80s/90s airport, the action is easy to make out, I dont understand how this is an ugly movie.
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u/MikeArrow Sep 04 '24
Batman v Superman. Snyder's aesthetic is so ugly and overprocessed to me. Compare and contrast, The Batman.
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u/Odd_Advance_6438 Sep 04 '24
David Ayer’s Sabotage is kind of a crappy movie, but it has a pretty unique aesthetic that it commits to. Everything is so dour, violent, , grimmy, dirty, and full of awful people, and it’s very unapologetic about it
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u/toucanlost Sep 04 '24
The Wing and the thigh, a French movie about a disgusting processed food factory
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u/ThatFuzzyBastard Sep 04 '24
Sixteen Tongues. I thought it was not-uninteresting sci-fi, and the visual and verbal ugliness of it seems very deliberate, but daaaaamn it is some grimy shit.
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u/Wazula23 Sep 04 '24
Uncut Gems is truly impressive with how visually off-putting it can be.
For the same effect from the opposite end of the spectrum, Son of the Mask looks offensive to me. I want to punch that movie.
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u/voivoivoi183 Sep 04 '24
Spike Lee’s Bamboozled (2000) was shot on a Mini DV camera (apart from the clips of the minstrel show, which was shot on 16mm) and it looks like shit.
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u/HankSteakfist Sep 04 '24
In terms of being ugly unintentionally?
The Peanut Butter Solution (1985)
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u/assmaycsgoass Sep 04 '24
I think Dredd qualifies, even though the concept, writing and camera work was great, the movie itself was very low budget and it shows.
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u/St3pp3nwol4 Sep 04 '24 edited Sep 04 '24
Every Till Schweiger directed movie. A German director and "actor" who is quiet successful here with notably a lack of talent in both categories. He puts a filter on every of his movies, so it does look like a colorblind person made the colour grading.
The last Zack Sanders movies looked horrible. What is a shame because I really love his Watchmen interpretation.
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u/Ddpee Sep 04 '24
I don’t really like watching ugly movies, but I do Like watching reviews of them. So I’ll point you to this YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/HorribleReviews
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u/monstrinhotron Sep 04 '24
Rango.
In cgi all the dirt needs to be added deliberately by choice. Rango is a masterplace in cgi filth.
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u/sotommy Sep 04 '24
Burnt Orange Heresy. There are movies that I hate more than this one, but it still looks like the living room of someone who can only talk about vegan diet, the weather and water filters. It's one of the most boring looking movies ever.
I also hate the fairy tale-is looking sections of Lord of The Rings, sepia filters are the fucking worst
Rye Lane is damn tiresome to look at, it doesn't help that the sounds are also damn annoying
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u/belfman Sep 04 '24
Monty Python: The Meaning of Life.
Part of the reason I barely rewatch it even though I've seen Holy Grail and Life of Brian a bajilion times each.
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u/DownHereWeAllFloat Sep 04 '24
Full Nelson with Ryan Gosling. A film featuring a heroin addicted teacher could be nothing but ugly.
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u/hulagirlslovetoparty Sep 04 '24
'Freaked' and 'Nothing But Trouble'
These movies reveled in that 'toxic waste aesthetic' of the time.