Web.archive.org Tasteofcinema The 20 Worst Movies Ever Made [ COMPLETE ]
There is a peculiar joy in diving into the internet’s past. Using the Wayback Machine (web.archive.org) to resurrect old film criticism is like opening a time capsule of outrage, snark, and unapologetic hot takes. One such gem, buried in the archives of Taste of Cinema (circa mid-2010s), is their infamous listicle: “The 20 Worst Movies Ever Made.”
(if the crawl survived). But be warned: the pop-up ads for “Ringtone Download” might have been scrubbed from history. Sadly, the cringe remains. Note: This write-up is a creative reconstruction. For an actual archived list, you would search web.archive.org/web/*/https://www.tasteofcinema.com plus the likely URL slug /the-20-worst-movies-ever-made/ . web.archive.org tasteofcinema the 20 worst movies ever made
The design itself is a relic: a grainy header image of Tommy Wiseau crying, adjacent to Google AdSense banners for “Learn Filmmaking in 30 Days.” Is Taste of Cinema’s “20 Worst Movies Ever Made” a serious piece of criticism? No. But as a historical artifact, it’s perfect. It captures the pre- Barbie , pre-SnyderCut era when “worst of” lists were tribal warfare, not algorithmic suggestions. There is a peculiar joy in diving into the internet’s past
Revisiting this list now—stripped of current revisionist hype and post-ironic fandom—reveals as much about the era’s critical orthodoxy as it does about the films themselves. As expected, the list dutifully includes the canonical disasters. Ed Wood’s Plan 9 from Outer Space sits comfortably in the top 5, praised more for its “sincere ineptitude” than its craft. Taste of Cinema describes it as “a film so broken it circles back to avant-garde.” Likewise, The Room (2003) makes an appearance, though the author cannot resist a snide “Oh, hi Mark” reference—a sign that even then, the film was transitioning from worst-ever to cult phenomenon. But be warned: the pop-up ads for “Ringtone
Thanks to the Wayback Machine, we can still laugh at its self-seriousness. The list’s real lesson? The worst movie ever made is always the one that disappointed you most last weekend.