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In honor of War of the Worlds‘ new status as trash cinema royalty, we’ve put together a list of movies whose awfulness actually makes them enjoyable — just not for the reasons the filmmakers intended. These aren’t movies that are intentionally “bad” like Sharknado, but honest, earnest attempts to create decent cinema that came out laughably bad for one reason or another. Here are seven “so bad they’re good” movies to watch after giggling through the latest adaptation of H.G. Wells’ War of the Worlds.
1) Jaws: The Revenge

In 1987, Universal Pictures decided to make up for the critically maligned Jaws 3D with a more personal Jaws film, as in “this shark has a personal vendetta against the Brody family.” Jaws: The Revenge attempts to answer the age-old question, “Do sharks get revenge?” by showing a single great white shark following a family from New England to the Bahamas just to torture them physically and psychologically. If that doesn’t sound ridiculous enough, check out the movie’s insane novelization.
Jaws: The Revenge has everything you want in a so bad it’s good movie — roaring sharks, characters flashing back to scenes from previous movies they weren’t there to experience, and at least one acclaimed actor, in this case Michael Caine, attempting to lend the film some legitimacy.
2) Super Mario Bros.

Super Mario Bros. is often considered one of the worst video game adaptations ever made. The 1993 movie bombed so hard that Nintendo waited 30 years to release another Mario movie. And yet, we’d be lying if we said the film didn’t have a certain charm. A confused mix of Mad Max and Jurassic Park, with only the barest resemblance to the video game it was based on, Super Mario Bros. definitely wasn’t the movie fans were expecting.
If you can look past its faults, however, the movie functions as an entertaining “Baby’s first post-apocalyptic sci-fi flick/acid trip.” Besides, who can pass up the chance to watch acting legend Dennis Hopper chew the scenery as King Koopa?
3) The Pit

The Pit (known in some markets as Teddy) is a 1981 Canadian horror movie about a 12-year-old boy named Jamie who discovers a pit in the woods full of little monsters he calls Tra-la-logs. After a suggestion from his sentient teddy bear Teddy, Jamie decides to lure everyone who’s ever wronged him to the pit and feed them to the Tra-la-logs. Oh, and did we mention that the kid is a creepy pervert?
The Pit is…well, calling it a weird movie seems like a bit of an understatement. It’s unique, we’ll put it that way. If you’re looking for a late-night cheese fest to put on while indulging in some adult substances, this is 100% your movie.












