19 Facts You Didn’t Know About the Worst Comic Book Movies

With a new year means new comic book movies. Most are great, but some are infamously bad. Lets take a look at the worst of the worst shall we.

Batman and Robin

mr. freeze

1. Arnold Schwarzeneggar was paid $1 million dollars per minute of screen time. Though I don’t know if that was verbatim in the contract, it certainly was what came out in the final product. It’s also almost a million dollars per ice pun.

2. This movie almost starred David Duchovny as Bruce Wayne when Val Kilmer had to bow out to film The Saint.

3. There was going to be a Batman Triumphant and Nightwing movie to succeed Batman & Robin. This is probably why we’ll never see Robin again on the big screen (except to be brutally murdered).

4. This movie was likely also the reason Superman Lives was canceled.

This might also have something to do with it.

Elektra

said no one ever.
Said no one ever.

5.  Up until recently, this was the worst rated superhero adaptation (10% on RT and B with CinemaScore). Batman and Robin have 11% on RT but a C+ on CinemaScore. The new Fantastic Four has been reviewed as much worse. 

6.  Even though the character is from Daredevil, all the promotional material emphasized a connection to the X-Men movies. Cause you know, facts.

7.  There is only a two letter difference between Elektra’s last name Natchios and “nachos.” This may not be interesting, but it explains why I have such a hard time pronouncing her name (and I took Greek).

Catwoman

8. This is the only comic book movie ever made that has NOTHING to do with it’s source material. She’s not even in Gotham City! It’s New York.

9. Halle Berry’s stunt and body double is a dude.

10. One of the biggest box office disasters of all time. It had a budget of $100 million and didn’t break $50 million in it’s lifetime gross.

Superman IV: The Quest for Peace

11. The movie almost saw the return of Richard Donner to the director’s chair, but he declined and Wes Craven was picked, although he left after creative differences with Christopher Reeves. Richard Lester was also offered the job, but also declined.

12. The movie had it’s budget slashed in half just before filming started, leaving only $17 million to make the movie. They made up for this by reusing the same shot of Christopher Reeves flying OVER AND OVER again.

OVER AND OVER AND OVER
OVER AND OVER AND OVER

13. The movie was originally cut at 136 minutes runtime, but was cut down to 90 for two reasons, 1) There were originally two Nuclear men, the first of which looked so bad on screen due to poor FX that he was cut entirely. 2) The production company, Cannon Group, had it cut to 90 minutes so that they could have more showings

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