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What follows are small cast desert island movies that do work, even if it’s just in a so-bad-it’s-good capacity. Like Sam Raimi’s thoroughly fantastic Send Help, they have a tint of humor and take place on an island that isn’t occupied by people 365 days a year.
5) I Still Know What You Did Last Summer

Raimi’s Send Help has a deliberate coating of comedy. I Still Know What You Did Last Summer is more of an unintentionally funny misadventure. It makes the viewer laugh even if it does provide at least a dusting of that claustrophobic chill that comes with being stranded on a single locale with water on all sides.
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer is so illogical even its title doesn’t make sense. This is one of the worst Scream-esque movies to come out in the wake of Ghostface’s massive success. It can’t even be half as genuinely frightening as its predecessor which, frankly, wasn’t all that scary to begin with. But if you get joy out of having a total cash grab of a script read out for you, not to mention a reefer-toking Jack Black, this is your movie.
Stream I Still Know What You Did Last Summer on Netflix.
4) Matango

Matango is the most bizarre movie to come from Toho’s Shลwa era output. And that’s really saying something considering it was also the era of Godzilla vs. Hedorah and a talking Minilla in Godzilla’s Revenge.
Much to its credit, for a movie that came out over 60 years ago and has people in mushroom tree costumes, Matango is actually pretty frightening. Its tone conveys dread successfully, the performances convince us that the group of characters are turning upon one another, and the antagonists definitely don’t look like something one would want to contend with.
Stream Matango on The Criterion Channel.











