I can happily state that I have not seen a single one of these movies. We still need the Worst of 2001, 2002, and 2003 to complete the series. Share them if you have them!
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi Ebert was gone from television by that point so I don't much care. Best of 2006 has Roeper and A.O. Scott and it's available on another site but the post-Ebert era of the show isn't very good and doesn't interest me.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 I understand. I feel the same way as you. I mostly enjoy the August 2006-Summer 2007 episodes with the various guest critics like Kevin Smith, Harold Ramis and Aisha Tyler etc. Those episodes stood out to me 💯 But my most favourite episodes of Ebert and Roeper are the ones with the red and blue theatre from September 2005 - June 2006.
@@mesicek7 the worst movies displayed in this segment I’ve seen are Bewitched, Son of the Mask, Monster-in-Law, Fantastic Four, The Man and The Longest Yard. The movies from this segment to avoid are Doom, Deuce Bigalow European Gigolo, Elektra, Stealth and The Legend of Zorro. I like Dwayne The Rock Johnson, Jamie Foxx and Rob Schneider but they did poor effort in the movies that I listed. I am a big fan of their other underrated flicks
"The problem with all of these movies is that they've seen too many other movies; they're bored with themselves; they lack a sense of wonder. Everyone is so casual about the stupendous events surrounding them, and the enormous powers at their command, and their challenges are so trivial." Very well put. If you've ever wondered why modern action/superhero movies are just kinda' eh.....this is the reason.
I was surprised that Son of the Mask was in the middle and not one of the top 2 worst. Deuce Bigalow 2 is the only one I would put at that level of stupidity.
@@willisskull2676 Never seen Deuce Bigalow 2 but the first one was funny. It seems like ever since the Farrelys and Judd Apatow stopped releasing movies, we haven't been getting that many guilty pleasure comedies. It makes me look back at even the less successful ones more fondly.
@@politefan8141 Both Deuce Bigalow movies have some really funny bits as well as some stuff that crosses some lines. I personally felt like 2 went too far in some aspects. I fully agree comedy movies have suffered. I was just thinking today how good a lot of movies and music was 20 years ago. I don't recall the last time a comedy really appealed to me besides a couple here and there like The Wrong Missy. Guess I'm stuck in the early 2000's and loving the games and movies from that time.
Despite the rough shape Roger was in at this point, the wit was still there! Sadly for poor Gene Siskel in his final six or seven months on the show, he was robbed of that sharpness that was his trademark.
This is mine: 10. Pop Star 09. Shadowboxer 08. Bloodrayne 07. My Big Fat Independent Movie 06. The Dukes of Hazzard 05. Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo 04. Son of the Mask 03. Meet the Family 02. Dirty Love 01. Chaos (David DeFalco)
When they showed the clip from _Doom_ with those horrible special effects and action scenes and that awful industrial heavy hop (or whatever you wanna call it) playing in the background, I couldn’t contain my laughter lol 😂
Yes, about a year after Schneider publicly insulted Ebert and spread false gossip about his personal etiquette. Schneider was very upset about Ebert trashing European Gigolo...but so did pretty much everyone else who saw it!
Did you hear about that story because Rob Schneider was bragging about being classy for having done it or because Ebert mentioned being grateful for it? The former would be a lot less impressive...
I feel like I've committed a sin at some point and my punishment is to be constantly reminded that the longest yard exists. I loved the film as an 11 year old but almost jumped from a window out of shame after seeing it again many years later. Every time I start to forget, someone mentions it
The Longest Yard is hilarious what are you ashamed of? U make it sound like u loved Jack and Jill or Grown Ups 2. The film is not even close to one of Sandlers worst films
Grew up watching Siskel and Ebert, and have been binge many of these great UA-cam compilations and episodes. Never watched anything with Roepert, and God I’m glad! He’s pretty annoying, but not Son of the Mask levels, at least.
I believe it. I worked at Blockbuster around the same time. I couldn't bring myself to suggest some of these movies when people would ask me what to rent. The guilt still plagues me to this day.
I mean, in any year the vast majority of rentals were horrible, dumb, over the top silly movies. Seems to be more of a trend with the renting crowd. The theater visiting crowd is usually more cautious as they are spending a bit more money. Not just the ticket but the drive, the parking, the food and drink, and the dry cleaning bill after sitting in a theater seat.
Here are my list of the worst movies of 2005. 10. King's Ransom 9. Are We There Yet? 8. Aeon Flux 7. Alone in the Dark 6. Yours, Mine, and Ours 5. Cheaper by the Dozen 2 4. Dirty Love 3. Son of the Mask 2. Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo The worst movie of 2005 1. The Dukes of Hazzard
I wanted Gene Siskel to be alive in 2005 in order to be with Roger Ebert for "The Worst of 2005" episode, but I wanted WWE superstar and the XFL's Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson to destroy boxer Manny Pacquiao after he was just in the Universal Pictures movie called "Doom" and Rob Schneider got a big huge slap in the face from Ebert for his role in "Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo."
Indeed, he said during their initial review that it was the closest he had ever come to walking out of a movie! Although, because it was a February release, perhaps he either forgot about it or the passage of time diminished his animosity. I think these shows made much more sense in earlier years when the hosts didn't waste time *ranking* the year's worst (who really cares?) and instead divided the year's greatest offences into trends and categories, only singling out their individual choices for #1 Worst.
ua-cam.com/video/-iZ9suJXJTk/v-deo.html scroll to 1:20 on the link attached to see the bits of the actual review of Son of the Mask. I apologize if it’s brief
2000 - 2009 was a *very* interesting era for movies. Like some of the best were made but at the same time they weren't afraid to make cheesy movies with ridiculous premises. Its also the last time i remember comedy movies getting heavily pushed in the mainstream, that almost never happens anymore
The Legend of Zorro was a huge letdown because I really enjoyed the 98 movie. Fantastic Four was average and I always liked Constantine even if it has very little to do with the comic. I would put Son of the Mask as the worst movie, there isn't one laugh or anything good coming from that movie.
I hate Legend of Zorro how it was too cheesy like Batman and Robin, his son being annoying, the villain being too dumb, and the writers who would go on to write the 2017 Mummy reboot 🤢
@@unholyperiodza5442 another messy reboot that came out that year was Jumanji. Jumanji 1995 is way better. Why can’t these originals be left alone as originals?!
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi Don't know but at least the writers of the Mummy reboot didn't write the Jumanji reboot, they wrote the Michael Bay Transformers sequels and the Amazing Spiderman 1 and 2.
Some great films in the 2000s but daaaaaamn the bad ones really were unwatchable. The difference between other decades is the bad movies cost as much as Titanic.
I have to give credit for Constantine and Elektra for being creative, and trying something different. They were at the very least interesting and visually done well. They stimulate the eyes and the imagination rather well, just not the brain.
I’m sorry, but being a critic and giving spoilers just because you hate a movie is unconscionable (not to mention incredibly pompous). Not everyone has seen every movie ever made like these guys have, and casual viewers might have actually been surprised. Siskel used to do that, and it always p***ed me off.
Fair point. I find it strange that Ebert wasted time singling out "D.E.B.S." and "Undead". Fast-faders that were barely released, died quickly at the box-office, and that few people had heard of even in 2005. This appears to violate his longstanding rule with Gene Siskel that it wasn't fair to use this annual special to pick on small, obscure movies, only big budget affairs or big star vehicles. "The Amityville Horror" was a major studio movie and (apparently) godawful, with a 1.5 star review from Ebert. It would have been a more appropriate choice for this program.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 in another segment of worst movies, Roger Ebert was going to list Thunderbirds but chose not to as he thought it wasn’t perfect for his worst films list
Ebert & Roeper were both right that "The Dukes of Hazzard" film in 2005 was terrible, but shame on them for trashing the original television series on CBS. That was a great series!! I guess not everybody has the same taste on television.
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi I agree that The Brady Bunch Movie was a stinker, and so were some others based on TV shows. I would make an exception for the 1993 film version of "The Fugitive" with Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones. That was well done, and Tommy Lee Jones' performance in particular was brilliant, as his character (the Federal Marshal pursuing Ford, the fugitive) changed subtly during the story in regard to his attitude towards the fugitive. But I would still say that the concept of adapting a classic TV show to the big screen is usually a losing proposition. It is as bad as remaking a classic film that shouldn't be remade, and we have regrettably seen a lot of that through the years! Shame on Hollywood for most remakes -- I say most, not all.
At first I was ready to start complaining about how this show would suck with Roeper instead of Siskel but after watching the reviews for Son Of The Mask I decided to stop bitching. Nothing worst than a sequel without Jim Carrey
Yikes. I remember most of these coming out when I was a kid and either seeing them or hearing about how bad they were. It’s crazy that these were all in the same year. When Fantastic Four was only listed at #10; I thought 2005 must have been a really brutal year for bad movies.
2005 was rather dire for films based on comic books. After the masterful Spider-Man 2 the year prior, the 2005 Fantastic Four, while not terrible, just doesn't cut it.
First time watching this video and I'm going to predict some of the movies that will appear on the lists: The Skelton Key, The Wedding Date, The Dukes of Hazzard, The Ringer and Son of the Mask should be mentioned.
@@muggsyaxton8085 I’m not old enough to remember those two together, but watching their episodes on UA-cam, I understand the appeal. All my memories are of Ebert and Roeper.
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi your question is kinda vague. Im gonna guess you meant "how so did it have too much competition" and my answer is all the others are REALLY bad. Like loud, epic, in your face bad. DEBS, son of the mask, doom, Elektra, Fantastic Four, Monster in law, Miss Congeniality 2, The Legend of Zorro. All horrible rotten movies in terms of plot, acting, and even minor stuff like the camera angles and sounds. Be Cool was just lazy, like it was full of self referential meta humor before it became popular, but thats boring and not inspired, and in some cases groan worthy. But its not big loud epic bad, like Battlefield Earth.
@@Shorty_Lickens I think Battlefield Earth is the worst. As for recommendations involving John Travolta or other crime comedies that are underrated, I recommend Swordfish with Hugh Jackman and as for crime comedies, I recommend Made with Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau and a music one by the name of In the Mix. It’s with Usher and Emmanuelle Chriqui, it’s got a vibe of The Bodyguard
I felt that the 2000’s marked the decline in film. Not saying that there weren’t some fantastic movies in there. I think filmmakers became lazy and started depending too much on cgi special effects rather than good scripts and acting.
Year after year, to this day, these lists show not only that people who make movies are often complete idiots, at least in the moment, but way more that the masses are morons. If people didn't pay to see horrible movies, then they would stop being made.
Burt Reynolds making yet another appearance on the Worst of lists😂😂😂.He’s gotta be the most frequent flyer. Some enterprising commenter should compile that list.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 don't know about theatre return but that has to be one of his biggest successes from the rental game. Must have sold so many tapes and dvds
I just watched the worst movies of 2002 segment and that one had a lot of awful movies whereas this segment, the 2004 one and the one from 2006 had underrated flicks
8:00 Roeper’s criticism of Dumb and Dumberer was a bit unfair here considering it was a prequel with the characters in high school therefore recasting made sense
He probably meant that they should have cast superior actors who could convince you of being Carrey/Daniels antecedents, but it didn't quite come out that way.
Considering the current Marvel flops i honestly wouldn't mind another 2005 Fantastic Four. I can't say the same for Silver Surfer. I legitimately cannot remember anything about that movie. Wait i thought people liked the Keanu Reeves John Constantine movie? I remember hearing rumors they wanted to make that movie cannon
Guess who the 2005 remake of the sweet 1967 the late Spencer Tracey and late sidney poitier classic was made 17 years before poitier passed away, thankfully he did not want to see this one.
My list The Honeymooners Son of the Mask The Fog The Man Miss Congeniality 2 Are We There Yet Rebound Be Cool Bewitched Doom Dirty Love Alone in The Dark Munich XXX State of the Union Good Night & Good Luck Doogal Stealth Fantastic Four
roeper really just can’t agree or relate to anything ebert says. always has to to tack on his own joke or make it about himself in some way or one up the insult at the movie to make it about himself. insufferable compared to siskel. rip to him and ebert
Agreed. He had a goofy schoolgirl temperament, and placed affected emphasis on his dorky quips as if he was hoping to be quoted in ads or score cheap laughs. I don't think it was always thus. Their rapport in the first 2 years (2000-2002) was decent because Ebert still had the energy to drive the act and Dick Roeper was still trying to prove himself as a serious co-host. The show went irreversibly downhill following Ebert's first significant cancer surgery in 2003.
@stefantomasi4036 I didn't say anything about his absence. He was ill for a long time before that. Radiation treatment for thyroid cancer in early 2002, which left a temporary droop in his mouth (evident in any review from February-April 2002 like "Laurel Canyon"). Salivary gland cancer first hit him in 2003, and he underwent surgery that year shortly after visiting the Cannes Film Festival. His physical decline was clear to everyone who watched, and in my view it dragged the show down because his energy was gone. The program also became increasingly gimmcky around that time.
@@williamhowe1 funny thing that The virgin spring, a Bergman film, used that story before, elevating the material and making it a fantastic film, this movie had no fucking excuse to be made and i hope it stays dead and buried in a cement coffin in another planet where that shit BELONGS.
@@williamhowe1 which Chaos movie from 2005 are you referring to? The horror thriller one or the action thriller one with Jason Statham, Ryan Philippe and Wesley Snipes
I definitely disagree, but to whatever extent that may be true, it's the result of lost weight and a better diet (he had gone vegetarian by this time). Possibly more makeup too.
Fantastic Four (2005) really wasn’t that bad. The cast carried it to being a solid movie IMO. Watching this, I can only imagine how much Ebert would have hated the FF reboot if he lived to see it.
I remember being pissed when Ebert included the Fantastic Four on his worst movies list as I thought he was wrong. But looking back at it, I can see why because it wasn't as good as I remember. Stealth was so bad, I couldn't even finish it and Jessica Biel's hotness wasn't enough to save the movie.
I've seen Constantine and i just did not like it. My cousin's ex girlfriend told me i should watch it and that its good and i wish i can tell her that it was a waste of time.
Yes that’s right. He left the show summer of 2006. Jay Leno came in late July 2006 and other guest show critics kept on filling in. Beginning of Fall 2007 til the end of the Ebert and Roeper series portion of At the Movies, Michael Phillips and AO Scott started doing more episodes with Roeper
The classic back-and-forths between Siskel and Ebert was actually great TV in and of itself. They had to stand each other, they didn’t have any other choice. Roeper on the other hand was hand-picked by Ebert himself, and it shows. More lapdog than critic. And somehow excrutiatingly smug.
RIP Roger Ebert - what an American Original!
'At least he crashes into a mountian so he can avoid the rest of the movie'
ROFL
edited and still couldnt spell right
@TerryFGM nothing better to do?
Ebert already wasn't doing so well. I hate cancer so much.
It’s sad that he left summer of 2006. At the Movies tremendously changed when Michael Phillips, AO Scott and the two Bens filled in.
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi I thought that Michael Phillips and AO Scott actually were a good fit, but the two Bens were terrible.
@@Xayjohns I agree with you. The two Bens had no faith to the previous segments
Poor dear man
It’s heart breaking to watch knowing the final result :(
I can't fathom the fact that Ebert and Roeper had to watch that abomination Son of the Mask. I see 10 seconds and I'm like "GOD NO!!" 🤣🤣
Here’s the Siskel and Ebert review of The Mask original; ua-cam.com/video/VwgKCnI2hh4/v-deo.html
Yeah being a movie critic sounds like all fun and games until you realize you have to watch movies like Son of the Mask or Deuce Bigalow
@Sans Deity Darn right. I never even finished watching Son of the Mask. I pity anyone who had no choice.
and it wasn't even at the bottom of their lists
It was horrifying how bad the usually really good Alan Cumming and Bob Hoskins were.
I can happily state that I have not seen a single one of these movies.
We still need the Worst of 2001, 2002, and 2003 to complete the series. Share them if you have them!
How about Best and Worst of 2006 and Best and Worst of 2007
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi Ebert was gone from television by that point so I don't much care. Best of 2006 has Roeper and A.O. Scott and it's available on another site but the post-Ebert era of the show isn't very good and doesn't interest me.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 I understand. I feel the same way as you. I mostly enjoy the August 2006-Summer 2007 episodes with the various guest critics like Kevin Smith, Harold Ramis and Aisha Tyler etc. Those episodes stood out to me 💯 But my most favourite episodes of Ebert and Roeper are the ones with the red and blue theatre from September 2005 - June 2006.
Haha i have sadly seen most of these.
@@mesicek7 the worst movies displayed in this segment I’ve seen are Bewitched, Son of the Mask, Monster-in-Law, Fantastic Four, The Man and The Longest Yard. The movies from this segment to avoid are Doom, Deuce Bigalow European Gigolo, Elektra, Stealth and The Legend of Zorro. I like Dwayne The Rock Johnson, Jamie Foxx and Rob Schneider but they did poor effort in the movies that I listed. I am a big fan of their other underrated flicks
This is 20 years old
you have good math skills
And in five years this will be 25 years old.
Closer to 19 years
"The problem with all of these movies is that they've seen too many other movies; they're bored with themselves; they lack a sense of wonder. Everyone is so casual about the stupendous events surrounding them, and the enormous powers at their command, and their challenges are so trivial."
Very well put. If you've ever wondered why modern action/superhero movies are just kinda' eh.....this is the reason.
I was thinking the same thing!
Look who's talking. Man if Ebert can't even hear himself. Ebert may be a bit jag lagged.
Interestingly, it was Son of the Mask (on Ebert's list only) that made Richard Roeper's worst-of-the-decade list four years later, coming in at #6.
DEUCE BIGALOW: EUROPEAN GIGOLO was ever worse.
lmaoo son of the mask!
I was surprised that Son of the Mask was in the middle and not one of the top 2 worst. Deuce Bigalow 2 is the only one I would put at that level of stupidity.
@@willisskull2676 Never seen Deuce Bigalow 2 but the first one was funny. It seems like ever since the Farrelys and Judd Apatow stopped releasing movies, we haven't been getting that many guilty pleasure comedies. It makes me look back at even the less successful ones more fondly.
@@politefan8141 Both Deuce Bigalow movies have some really funny bits as well as some stuff that crosses some lines. I personally felt like 2 went too far in some aspects.
I fully agree comedy movies have suffered. I was just thinking today how good a lot of movies and music was 20 years ago. I don't recall the last time a comedy really appealed to me besides a couple here and there like The Wrong Missy. Guess I'm stuck in the early 2000's and loving the games and movies from that time.
This brings back some great memories
Despite the rough shape Roger was in at this point, the wit was still there! Sadly for poor Gene Siskel in his final six or seven months on the show, he was robbed of that sharpness that was his trademark.
I saw a TedTalk video of him after he’d lost his voice.
Even there he still showed wit!
7:03 I had that on DVD as a kid- I couldn't even FINISH it when I first saw it! :0
I feel the same way. It’s sucky when certain movies are hit and miss
Hell i saw the dvd for racing strips i was so scared by it didn’t even watch it
I kind of love Ebert even more now for suggesting Brittany Murphy.
Ehh... I actually enjoyed Constantine. Ah well. "If everyone liked the same thing we'd still be sitting in animal skins painting on walls"
Yes agreed...Constantine has a very solid fan following
There is a difference between people disagreeing about films that are considered good quality, versus liking...crap.
This is mine:
10. Pop Star
09. Shadowboxer
08. Bloodrayne
07. My Big Fat Independent Movie
06. The Dukes of Hazzard
05. Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo
04. Son of the Mask
03. Meet the Family
02. Dirty Love
01. Chaos (David DeFalco)
Constantine was incredible
They called the movie Stealth because no one saw it.
I saw stealth lol. It wasn’t atrocious. Just totally boring.
Biggest bomb 💣 no one was there the day I saw it
When they showed the clip from _Doom_ with those horrible special effects and action scenes and that awful industrial heavy hop (or whatever you wanna call it) playing in the background, I couldn’t contain my laughter lol 😂
2005 wasn't exactly top heavy but had a lot of good-very good films. Man, though.. when Son of the Mask is the #5 worst, you know it's a bad year.
2006 was almost a better year of movies
No but for me it was the dawn of a great video game era and I spent more time with that.
@@Shorty_Lickenstrue ps3 and xbox 360 were starting out good times
There were 9 films worse than Fantastic 4 in 2005.
Just sit and ponder that frightening, hellish observation
Especially given how we have a worse fantastic four version that being fan4stic
Interestingly, Rob Schnieder sent Roger Ebert a beautiful bouquet of flowers when he had his voice box removed from cancer.
That’s kind of him
Yeah, I believe the card read "from your least favorite actor, Rob Schneider." It was a classy thing to do.
@@Xayjohns a wonderful gesture
Yes, about a year after Schneider publicly insulted Ebert and spread false gossip about his personal etiquette. Schneider was very upset about Ebert trashing European Gigolo...but so did pretty much everyone else who saw it!
Did you hear about that story because Rob Schneider was bragging about being classy for having done it or because Ebert mentioned being grateful for it? The former would be a lot less impressive...
I feel like I've committed a sin at some point and my punishment is to be constantly reminded that the longest yard exists. I loved the film as an 11 year old but almost jumped from a window out of shame after seeing it again many years later. Every time I start to forget, someone mentions it
@Weener Schnitzel Grown Ups 2 is a disappointment in my eyes
The Longest Yard is hilarious what are you ashamed of? U make it sound like u loved Jack and Jill or Grown Ups 2. The film is not even close to one of Sandlers worst films
I thought it was absolutely hilarious when I saw it, but it has been a while.
Grew up watching Siskel and Ebert, and have been binge many of these great UA-cam compilations and episodes. Never watched anything with Roepert, and God I’m glad! He’s pretty annoying, but not Son of the Mask levels, at least.
He had horrible takes I still watched for ebert
I worked in a DVD shop in 2006 and a lot of these movies were renting heavily. I learned from that job that people have no taste. Or brains.
Oh wow
I believe it. I worked at Blockbuster around the same time. I couldn't bring myself to suggest some of these movies when people would ask me what to rent. The guilt still plagues me to this day.
I mean, in any year the vast majority of rentals were horrible, dumb, over the top silly movies. Seems to be more of a trend with the renting crowd. The theater visiting crowd is usually more cautious as they are spending a bit more money. Not just the ticket but the drive, the parking, the food and drink, and the dry cleaning bill after sitting in a theater seat.
"Oooh! Navy Seals!"
Here are my list of the worst movies of 2005.
10. King's Ransom
9. Are We There Yet?
8. Aeon Flux
7. Alone in the Dark
6. Yours, Mine, and Ours
5. Cheaper by the Dozen 2
4. Dirty Love
3. Son of the Mask
2. Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo
The worst movie of 2005
1. The Dukes of Hazzard
"Are we there yet" was painful!
Boy I can’t believe all those came out that year. 2005 is when pop culture nosedived and never came back
I love Richard's Keanu Reeves voice. I need to see more reviews of his movies.
I’m in the same boat as you. I want to watch more Ebert and Roeper videos that I haven’t seen in a long time
I use it as a recommend list.
Dvd rental fees. What a throwback
Just for the record (tv show and movie notwithstanding), daisy dukes will *_never_* be out of fashion. Nor should they be.
I hated Undead so much that I used the DVD as a clay pigeon and blew it out of the sky.
7:59 love it when he says Dumb and Dumberer 😂😂😂
I wanted Gene Siskel to be alive in 2005 in order to be with Roger Ebert for "The Worst of 2005" episode, but I wanted WWE superstar and the XFL's Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson to destroy boxer Manny Pacquiao after he was just in the Universal Pictures movie called "Doom" and Rob Schneider got a big huge slap in the face from Ebert for his role in "Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo."
Ebert and Roeper on a channel called Flaccidus Minimus. Sometimes i wish UA-cam was a real place.
6:40 - Roger, "Doom" wasn't "basically" a video game, it was based *on* a (pre-existing) video game!
I loved Constantine and DOOM. I also liked Stealth...Jessica was hawt.
Proud to say that I didn't see one of these and that I remember almost none.
fantastic four? I OBJECT! that had Jessica alba in an incredibly sexy, scantily clad scene, therefore it was AMAZING and broke historic grounds!
How is “Son of the Mask” not on Roeper’s list. I thought I’ve heard him say it’s one of the worst of all time.
Indeed, he said during their initial review that it was the closest he had ever come to walking out of a movie! Although, because it was a February release, perhaps he either forgot about it or the passage of time diminished his animosity.
I think these shows made much more sense in earlier years when the hosts didn't waste time *ranking* the year's worst (who really cares?) and instead divided the year's greatest offences into trends and categories, only singling out their individual choices for #1 Worst.
ua-cam.com/video/-iZ9suJXJTk/v-deo.html scroll to 1:20 on the link attached to see the bits of the actual review of Son of the Mask. I apologize if it’s brief
We waited 11 years... For that?!
I think they try to not overlap too much so they can have 20 films in total, so they likely agree on a few but share the “glory” for the TV show.
2000 - 2009 was a *very* interesting era for movies. Like some of the best were made but at the same time they weren't afraid to make cheesy movies with ridiculous premises. Its also the last time i remember comedy movies getting heavily pushed in the mainstream, that almost never happens anymore
That was a great Reeves impersonation.
Super good 👍
Truly was lmaooo
@@Blodia1990 😂 I would’ve loved to see Richard do more celebrity impersonations
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi Yeah I bet he would be good at them. His Reeves was spot on lmaooo
@@Blodia1990 i can picture him doing Owen Wilson or someone lol
The Legend of Zorro was a huge letdown because I really enjoyed the 98 movie. Fantastic Four was average and I always liked Constantine even if it has very little to do with the comic. I would put Son of the Mask as the worst movie, there isn't one laugh or anything good coming from that movie.
Fantastic 4 is indeed a great movie
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi no
I hate Legend of Zorro how it was too cheesy like Batman and Robin, his son being annoying, the villain being too dumb, and the writers who would go on to write the 2017 Mummy reboot 🤢
@@unholyperiodza5442 another messy reboot that came out that year was Jumanji. Jumanji 1995 is way better. Why can’t these originals be left alone as originals?!
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi Don't know but at least the writers of the Mummy reboot didn't write the Jumanji reboot, they wrote the Michael Bay Transformers sequels and the Amazing Spiderman 1 and 2.
You can tell Ebert was sick with his jaw ....
Damn I MISS the 2000's.
Some great films in the 2000s but daaaaaamn the bad ones really were unwatchable.
The difference between other decades is the bad movies cost as much as Titanic.
I have to give credit for Constantine and Elektra for being creative, and trying something different. They were at the very least interesting and visually done well. They stimulate the eyes and the imagination rather well, just not the brain.
Fantastic Four(2005) was fun and decent. Michael Giacchino is composing music for the next film.
I’m sorry, but being a critic and giving spoilers just because you hate a movie is unconscionable (not to mention incredibly pompous). Not everyone has seen every movie ever made like these guys have, and casual viewers might have actually been surprised. Siskel used to do that, and it always p***ed me off.
You remember where you were when these films came out, that's the interesting part.
Surprised no mention of "The Amityville Horror "
Fair point. I find it strange that Ebert wasted time singling out "D.E.B.S." and "Undead". Fast-faders that were barely released, died quickly at the box-office, and that few people had heard of even in 2005. This appears to violate his longstanding rule with Gene Siskel that it wasn't fair to use this annual special to pick on small, obscure movies, only big budget affairs or big star vehicles. "The Amityville Horror" was a major studio movie and (apparently) godawful, with a 1.5 star review from Ebert. It would have been a more appropriate choice for this program.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 in another segment of worst movies, Roger Ebert was going to list Thunderbirds but chose not to as he thought it wasn’t perfect for his worst films list
@Morse Team America World Police came out in 2004
Nah, it was at least better than Amityville 3D.
Least Ryan Reynolds didn't scream like a girl compared to that guy who got his face fried in 3D.
Ebert & Roeper were both right that "The Dukes of Hazzard" film in 2005 was terrible, but shame on them for trashing the original television series on CBS. That was a great series!! I guess not everybody has the same taste on television.
Sorry, I meant the same taste in television.
@@brianforbes8325 there were a couple of bad movies based on TV shows and the worst one IMO is The Brady Bunch Movie
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi I agree that The Brady Bunch Movie was a stinker, and so were
some others based on TV shows. I would make an exception for the 1993 film version of "The Fugitive" with Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones. That was well done, and Tommy Lee Jones' performance in particular was brilliant, as his character (the Federal Marshal pursuing Ford, the fugitive) changed subtly during the story in regard to his attitude towards the fugitive. But I would still say that the concept of adapting a classic TV show to the big screen is usually a losing proposition. It is as bad as remaking a classic film that shouldn't be remade, and we have regrettably seen a lot of that through the years! Shame on Hollywood for most remakes -- I say most, not all.
@@brianforbes8325 The Fugitive is a great one indeed! Spot on about everything you said
@@brianforbes8325 and of course the addams family movies
Guess Who with Bernie Mac was actually pretty good
Yes it was. A bit more funny and charming than My Boss’ Daughter and Just Married
No
At first I was ready to start complaining about how this show would suck with Roeper instead of Siskel but after watching the reviews for Son Of The Mask I decided to stop bitching. Nothing worst than a sequel without Jim Carrey
The problem with constatine he dosnt act anything like the charecter from the comic, and matt Ryan nailed it.
Thank you
Richard Roeper said it, best at 17:03-17:14...
I agree.
Yikes. I remember most of these coming out when I was a kid and either seeing them or hearing about how bad they were. It’s crazy that these were all in the same year. When Fantastic Four was only listed at #10; I thought 2005 must have been a really brutal year for bad movies.
2005 was rather dire for films based on comic books. After the masterful Spider-Man 2 the year prior, the 2005 Fantastic Four, while not terrible, just doesn't cut it.
First time watching this video and I'm going to predict some of the movies that will appear on the lists: The Skelton Key, The Wedding Date, The Dukes of Hazzard, The Ringer and Son of the Mask should be mentioned.
Hey if I had a son I wouldn't want him to marry Jennifer Lopez either.
The Legend of Zorro is a crushing disappointment after the excellent Mask of.
I agree, I loved the first movie but Legend was dog s@@@.
Had the worst villain ever in my opinion, with his demise featured the most hilarious scream in a motion picture XD
Rob Schneider and Jenny McCarthy are about as good at screenwriting as they are at understanding how vaccines work.
🤣
@@muggsyaxton8085 found Rob Schneider's only fan
@@muggsyaxton8085 lol shhhhh dad joke democrat needs this more
I’m just happy that people are still watching this show.
@@muggsyaxton8085 I’m not old enough to remember those two together, but watching their episodes on UA-cam, I understand the appeal. All my memories are of Ebert and Roeper.
8:08 Miss Congeniality 2
13:37 -Okay, I thought this was a trailer to a Coen brothers movie...
Ok but Monster in Law is one of my fav guilty pleasure comedies
Be Cool was also terrible, but had too much competition for a Bottom 10 list.
How so?
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi your question is kinda vague. Im gonna guess you meant "how so did it have too much competition" and my answer is all the others are REALLY bad. Like loud, epic, in your face bad. DEBS, son of the mask, doom, Elektra, Fantastic Four, Monster in law, Miss Congeniality 2, The Legend of Zorro. All horrible rotten movies in terms of plot, acting, and even minor stuff like the camera angles and sounds.
Be Cool was just lazy, like it was full of self referential meta humor before it became popular, but thats boring and not inspired, and in some cases groan worthy. But its not big loud epic bad, like Battlefield Earth.
@@Shorty_Lickens I think Battlefield Earth is the worst. As for recommendations involving John Travolta or other crime comedies that are underrated, I recommend Swordfish with Hugh Jackman and as for crime comedies, I recommend Made with Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau and a music one by the name of In the Mix. It’s with Usher and Emmanuelle Chriqui, it’s got a vibe of The Bodyguard
I felt that the 2000’s marked the decline in film. Not saying that there weren’t some fantastic movies in there. I think filmmakers became lazy and started depending too much on cgi special effects rather than good scripts and acting.
If you limited yourself to American movies and mainly watched blockbusters, that would be a reasonable conclusion.
I would say the late 2000s was a major drop off for American movies.
Iol at roper laughing as ebert describes the constitute plot
The baby come to mommy bit was pretty funny.
Alba should be the visible girl, not the invisible girl.
Good point, Richard.
Year after year, to this day, these lists show not only that people who make movies are often complete idiots, at least in the moment, but way more that the masses are morons. If people didn't pay to see horrible movies, then they would stop being made.
Burt Reynolds making yet another appearance on the Worst of lists😂😂😂.He’s gotta be the most frequent flyer. Some enterprising commenter should compile that list.
The Longest yard did really well I remember the theater being packed
Maybe in its opening weeks, but overall it only earned a modest profit. Seems to be one of his least hated comedies though.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 don't know about theatre return but that has to be one of his biggest successes from the rental game. Must have sold so many tapes and dvds
Nice to remind yourself sometimes that every year, every decade, there are terrible movies being made, not just in recent times. 😀🇸🇪
I just watched the worst movies of 2002 segment and that one had a lot of awful movies whereas this segment, the 2004 one and the one from 2006 had underrated flicks
Of course, but the best of the 90s for example was far superior compared to the 2000s or especially the 2010s.
🦃 2005, Year of the turkey.
I like that indie Aussie, zombie, movie The Undead. Sometimes movies have to be cut a little slack considering they have small budgets.
What's the 437 reference?
The reference at 4:37?
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi no when Richard Roeper said: “Or at number 437 if you’re going the other way.” That was when they recapped their Top 10.
@@CJmovie92 Presumably the 437th 'best' movie, if he'd watched 447 movies that year - going the other way as he said.
8:00 Roeper’s criticism of Dumb and Dumberer was a bit unfair here considering it was a prequel with the characters in high school therefore recasting made sense
He probably meant that they should have cast superior actors who could convince you of being Carrey/Daniels antecedents, but it didn't quite come out that way.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 I get what you mean.
No one said they had to do a prequel with younger versions though, I'm sure it had to do with Carrey and Daniels being too busy probably.
Roeper's phony cackle is the worst of 2005.
Considering the current Marvel flops i honestly wouldn't mind another 2005 Fantastic Four. I can't say the same for Silver Surfer. I legitimately cannot remember anything about that movie. Wait i thought people liked the Keanu Reeves John Constantine movie? I remember hearing rumors they wanted to make that movie cannon
Guess who the 2005 remake of the sweet 1967 the late Spencer Tracey and late sidney poitier classic was made 17 years before poitier passed away, thankfully he did not want to see this one.
I’m here after hearing Poitier’s passing
My list
The Honeymooners
Son of the Mask
The Fog
The Man
Miss Congeniality 2
Are We There Yet
Rebound
Be Cool
Bewitched
Doom
Dirty Love
Alone in The Dark
Munich
XXX State of the Union
Good Night & Good Luck
Doogal
Stealth
Fantastic Four
13:29 that laugh
Love that chuckle 🤭
roeper really just can’t agree or relate to anything ebert says. always has to to tack on his own joke or make it about himself in some way or one up the insult at the movie to make it about himself. insufferable compared to siskel. rip to him and ebert
Roeper was a good substitute for Siskel. I know he’s no siskel but still
Agreed. He had a goofy schoolgirl temperament, and placed affected emphasis on his dorky quips as if he was hoping to be quoted in ads or score cheap laughs. I don't think it was always thus. Their rapport in the first 2 years (2000-2002) was decent because Ebert still had the energy to drive the act and Dick Roeper was still trying to prove himself as a serious co-host. The show went irreversibly downhill following Ebert's first significant cancer surgery in 2003.
@@flaccidusminimus2170 He was sick in summer of 2006. That’s when he was absent
@@flaccidusminimus2170 also, LOL @ the goofy school girl temperament 😂
@stefantomasi4036 I didn't say anything about his absence. He was ill for a long time before that. Radiation treatment for thyroid cancer in early 2002, which left a temporary droop in his mouth (evident in any review from February-April 2002 like "Laurel Canyon"). Salivary gland cancer first hit him in 2003, and he underwent surgery that year shortly after visiting the Cannes Film Festival. His physical decline was clear to everyone who watched, and in my view it dragged the show down because his energy was gone. The program also became increasingly gimmcky around that time.
In going through these "worst" compilations from the early '80s on, it's apparent that the worst movies keep getting worse with each passing year.
The longest yard was a good movie
The fantastic bore
The 2015 remake is like that the most imo
Fantastic four is not one of the worst movies
It’s an instant classic. So awesome!
So better than Fant4stic
Not at all. I like both of the 2000s F4 movies.
I guess Ebert didn't want to give Chaos the satisfaction of being mentioned on this show.
He did right, that movie was pathetic , PATHETIC, the director punishing his audience for seeing his film, ill say it again: PATHEEEEEETIIIICCCC
@@marcelineetyvan3665 It may be the worst movie ever made.
@@williamhowe1 funny thing that The virgin spring, a Bergman film, used that story before, elevating the material and making it a fantastic film, this movie had no fucking excuse to be made and i hope it stays dead and buried in a cement coffin in another planet where that shit BELONGS.
@@williamhowe1 which Chaos movie from 2005 are you referring to? The horror thriller one or the action thriller one with Jason Statham, Ryan Philippe and Wesley Snipes
@@stefanmovieflixtomasi The horror movie.
Deuce Bigelow is not that bad. It's supposed to be silly.
Most comedies are. That isn't an indication of quality.
How does Ebert look younger here than he did in the 90s episodes
I definitely disagree, but to whatever extent that may be true, it's the result of lost weight and a better diet (he had gone vegetarian by this time). Possibly more makeup too.
Siskel was absorbing his life force.
Fantastic Four (2005) really wasn’t that bad. The cast carried it to being a solid movie IMO.
Watching this, I can only imagine how much Ebert would have hated the FF reboot if he lived to see it.
I agree with you about the Fantastic Four (2005) version. However, I hate the 2015 reboot.
I actually like both of the Tim Story Fantastic Four movies.
@@Xayjohns 👍
One of his quotes from that review probably would have been a book title
@@stefanmovieflixtomasim0r0n
So... his name is Dick Roeper?
Perhaps not coincidentally, he was rumored to be a swinger in the heyday of this program ;)
@@flaccidusminimus2170 so, thumbs up…literally?
"I'd recommend watching it without looking at the screen"
I remember being pissed when Ebert included the Fantastic Four on his worst movies list as I thought he was wrong. But looking back at it, I can see why because it wasn't as good as I remember. Stealth was so bad, I couldn't even finish it and Jessica Biel's hotness wasn't enough to save the movie.
Any film that doesn’t allow Jessica Alba to showcase her full acting ability..is doomed to failure!
Also, The Love Guru is an underrated movie with Jessica Alba
The start of superhero film overload....
Undead is a blast. Solid horror comedy with a cool main character.
“Aging” Antonio Banderas? He is still a Daddy in 2024! These dudes were TOO wrong!
I've seen Constantine and i just did not like it. My cousin's ex girlfriend told me i should watch it and that its good and i wish i can tell her that it was a waste of time.
Last time Roger was on the show to do the worst list, sadly.
Yes that’s right. He left the show summer of 2006. Jay Leno came in late July 2006 and other guest show critics kept on filling in. Beginning of Fall 2007 til the end of the Ebert and Roeper series portion of At the Movies, Michael Phillips and AO Scott started doing more episodes with Roeper
I never saw any of these MOVIES.Thank God.
The classic back-and-forths between Siskel and Ebert was actually great TV in and of itself. They had to stand each other, they didn’t have any other choice. Roeper on the other hand was hand-picked by Ebert himself, and it shows. More lapdog than critic. And somehow excrutiatingly smug.
You say that like Ebert and Siskel wasn't smug themselves