What Are The Worst Comic Movies Ever Made?

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The Amazing Spider-Man 3:

New Goblin, Sandman, Venom, and a weird scene in which Peter Parker dances around the streets of New York City are all featured in Spider-Man 3’s $250 million budget. Because of this, Parker is frequently portrayed as a brat in the Comic Movies.

The Last Stand: X-Men:

Comic Movies

The Dark Phoenix Saga plotline and the resurrection of Jean Gray as Phoenix are both included in this 2006 film. It was described as “vaguely empty and disappointing” by Maitland McDonough in T.V. Guide Magazine. 

Thor:

Chris Hems worth’s portrayal of Thor, the son of Odin, was introduced in this fourth film in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). After the first 25 minutes, the Chicago Tribune’s Michael Philips said that the film gets better, but not until the finish.

The Incredible Hulk in Iron Man 2:

Downey Jr. reprises his role as Tony Stark in this “better than average” sequel that, regrettably, falls well short of the original.

Watchmen:

Watchmen is a film version of Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ graphic novel of the same name. The Comic series takes place in a 1985 parallel reality in which superheroes exist, and Richard Nixon is still in office. Comic Movies critics were more divided on the merits of the comic than the film. 

The Man of Steel:

Zack Snyder’s Superman origin narrative, starring Henry Cavill as the eponymous Man of Steel, depicts General Zod’ s ambition to convert Earth into a new Krypton and obliterate humanity in the process. “Pleasure-free” was the verdict of New York Magazine’s David Edelstein. 

The Dark World of Thor:

Rather than being a villain, Tom Hiddleston plays an ally of Thor’s against Malekith the Accursed in this 2013 sequel. Even if “the picture would not feel like such a crack in Marvel’s generally solid armor,” Kate Erbland wondered, “if only all of Thor: The Dark World could replicate the brilliance of its concluding act.” 

Hulk:

superheroes

To avoid confusion, this Ang Lee-directed film stars Eric Bana as the vast green superhero. Critic Desson Thomson of the Washington Post was unsure if he was witnessing an “art-house superhero flick or a computer-generated ‘King Kong.'”

The Amazing Spider-Man 2: The Ultimate Collection

We see Andrew Garfield’s Spider-Man face off against Doc Octopus and his Oscorp-sponsored fusion reactor in the sequel to Comic Movies. There’s too much story squeezed into the film’s 142-minute running length. 

Apocalypse: X-Men

Apocalypse, a powerful and god-like mutant that awoke in 1983 and wants to dominate the world as he did in ancient Egypt, appears in this X-Men film. “A muddled, bloated mess,” Angelica Jade Bastien, the film’s critic, stated.

The sequel to Blade II:

Reapers are a new breed of mutated vampires that Wesley Snipes reprises as half-human, half-vampire Blade in this 2002 thriller. “The fight scenes linger way too long and appear way too computer-generated,” said Salon’s Laura Miller.

Val Kilmer plays Batman in Joel Schumacher’s 1995 Batman picture, produced by Tim Burton and directed by Schumacher. In Hal Hinson’s words, “sometimes exhilarating, but rarely inspired, it is thoroughly-almost completely acceptable.” 

Constantine:

In this 2005 picture, Keanu Reeves appears as John Constantine, who has suicidal terminal cancer who can detect the presence of half-angels and half-demons. According to Variety’s Brian Lowry, the picture became “stuck in a confusing narrative mess.” 

Blade:

vampires

In this grim superhero picture, Wesley Snipes portrays Blade, a vampire hunter who fights to save humanity from the return of the vampire blood deity La Magra .”Frequently absurd, mainly terribly written and, unexpectedly poorly played too,” Chicago Tribune critic Michael Wilmington said of the picture. 

The Silver Surfer: Fantastic Four:

In this sequel from 2007, Chris Evans and Jessica Alba return to face off against Doctor Doom. Even though no Excellent Four film has ever been genuinely fantastic, this one remains the finest. 

Dawn of Justice: Batman vs. Superman

Batman has a deep-seated distrust of Henry Cavill’ s Superman in this 2016 D.C. Comic Movies believe him to be a threat to Earth. According to Slate’s Jonathan Fischer, the film is “broadly incomprehensible.” This is the third installment of the

Superman series. In this 1983 Superman film starring Christopher Reeves, Clark Kent is opposed to a criminal version. According to Variety, it was described as a “shocking soft-core failure” lacking in the weight of its predecessors. 

The Dark Phoenix:

It’s possible that Simon Kinberg’ s picture, which had its third act reshot in 2018 owing to negative test screening results, is already past redemption.

X-Men: 

Brandon Davis, one of our staff members, described Apocalypse as “underwhelming and visceral. “Instead of being thought-provoking or streamlined, Dark Phoenix is a disappointingly anticlimactic, predictable tale of misunderstood mutants,” writes Tim Grierson of Screen Daily.

War Zone of the Punisher:

Ray Stevenson was recast as the Punisher in this sequel to the 2004 film. Keith Phipps from The A.V. had a better outcome than this newcomer. To Club’s dismay, “This is garbage, a series of hard-R action scenes stitched together by the thinnest of stories.” 

The Duck Howard:

A mechanical duck puppet and Lea Thompson appear in Marvel’s infamous box office disaster from 1986, The Avengers. It’s worth noting that, according to Newsweek, “George Lucas served as the film’s executive producer.” He had no support from the Force.”

The Batman and Robin:

This critically panned Comic Movies, which stars George Clooney as Batman and Chris O’Donnell as Robin, is mainly remembered for the staggering number of puns Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Mr. Freeze manages to deliver. For Marc Savlov of the Austin Chronicle, it was a snub “excruciatingly slender and limp. counterfeit that has spectators in fits of giggles and horror.”

Fifty Shades of Gray:

At the 2015 Golden Raspberry Awards, the Fantastic Four reboot starred Miles Teller, Michael B. Jordan, Kate Mara, and Jamie Bell took home the Comic Movies of the year. Because of how unimpressive Fantastic Four is, a critic for the Tampa Bay Times wrote, “the film’s moniker appears to be an illegal infringement on truth in advertising laws.” 

Cat woman:

Comic Movies

Halle Berry plays Cat woman, an agile antihero based on the D.C. Comics character, in this campy 2004 film. “Cartoonish effects and overacting make this more maize than catnip,” wrote David Sterritt in the Christian Science Monitor. 

Superman IV: The Return of Superman

Nuclear Man, one of the most satirized supervillains of all time, appears in Superman IV as Mark Pillow’s character, Nuclear Man. Desson Thomson said it was like “a funeral barge, cheaper than a sale at Kmart.” “Sluggish” 

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