Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Actors That HATE Their Movies!


Kate Winslet is none too pleased about seeing her then-21-year-old self in 3D.

The down-to-earth actress says she's horrified by her nude scenes, haunted by Titanic jokes and wants to vomit every time she hears Celine Dion's ballad 'My Heart Will Go On.' We're getting the impression that Winslet isn't a fan of her big screen appearance.


Megan Fox, ever the sensational soundbite, was quick to criticize Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen for its focus on special effects and not acting. 'I don't want to blow smoke up people's a**. People are well aware that this is not a movie about acting,' she told Entertainment Weekly. On The Early Show, she wondered, 'I don't know how you saw it in IMAX without having a brain aneurysm or at least a migraine headache. I'm in the movie... and I still didn't know what was happening.'


Even Halle Berry couldn't make Catwoman (a.k.a. 'CINO' or 'Catwoman In Name Only' as the hardcore DC fans like to call it) look good; but at least she accepted her flop of a flick in good spirit. Winner of four Razzies for Worst Picture, Worst Director, Worst Screenplay and Worst Actress, Berry accepted her Razzie in person with an acceptance speech that held nothing back: 'First of all, I want to thank Warner Brothers. Thank you for putting me in this... god-awful movie. It was just what my career needed.' Her statement was received with massive applause and cat calls.


Shia LaBeouf may sometimes lack a verbal filter, but many of us would agree with his attack on the fourth Indiana Jones movie. In fact, the movie was so bad that it yielded a brand new synonym for 'jumping the shark.' 'Nuking the fridge' was coined after the scene where Indy survives a nuclear blast by hiding in a refrigerator. Flexing his mouthpiece, LaBeouf spoke out: 'I feel like I dropped the ball on the legacy that people loved and cherished. . . We [Harrison Ford and LaBeouf] had major discussions. He wasn't happy with it either.'


It was only recently that George Clooney really opened up about the cinematic abomination known as Batman & Robin a.k.a the worst Batman movie ever. After previously making a few short, sharp digs at the Joel Schumacher-directed movie ('I think we might have killed the franchise'), Clooney didn't hold back any punches during press for The Ides Of March: '[Batman & Robin] was a difficult film to be good in. With hindsight it's easy to look back at this and go, 'Woah, that was really s*** and I was really bad in it,'' he told reporters in September 2011.

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