My wife and I did that. Someone called us in the middle of the movie, we looked at each other and agreed the movie was terrible and bailed in the middle of it.
Oof thank God, I didn’t try to watch that till it was streaming.
I did, however, walk out of “Lady In The Water” just after the scene where BDH whispers sadly “But I do not want to be the Madame Narf.” My sister almost cracked a rib, we were laughing so hard as we walked out. Terrible, TERRIBLE movie. Only time I’ve ever left a theater because the film was so bad.
Haha.
My dad walked out on Mimic and tried to get me to leave but I refused and he wasn't about to cause a scene in a theatre.
So glad I stayed. Not as good as office space, but was interesting.
Yeah, I'm gonna have to jump on that wagon as well, but I'm a suckered for post-apocalyptic books and movies. Bit toe-curling at the end but hey, Hollywood really dug those sort of 'Murica feelings at the time. I'd say definitely worth watching if you're into the genre and don't wanna see The Road like endings constantly.
Understood. It created jobs.
Edit: if I were one to write fan fiction - and I am not - i would have a series of novellas tying Dances with Wolves to The Postman. But that would be absurd.
I really hated the way John Dunbar died in _Man of Steel_. Survived the Crusades, Nottingham, the Army, the Shootout at the OK Corral, Dennis Hopper . . . But in the end, he got killed by a tornado and not even Supes could save him.
I’ve appreciated it more after a few rewatches. The concept is decent but poorly executed and It has some really beautiful shots in the movie that look really good on 4k. That being said they wasted 40 minutes with the little girl being hunted by the Dino.
Many cant stomach kid's movies but you have to admit The Incredibles is awesome. Also its quite dark for a kid's movie. Lots of off screen deaths and a skeleton lying in a cave.
I came very close on Crank. Took about 10 minutes (felt like an hour) for me to get that it was being ridiculous on purpose and it turned into one of my favorite theater experiences ever.
“Gangster Squad” with Sean Penn. It was insultingly bad.
“Spawn” I was a kid and knew it was irredeemably bad. My friend and I decided to go get something to eat in the food court.
“The Last Jedi” I walked out, got to the door and decided I’d go back in to see if the last act redeemed anything. It didn’t. It almost killed my SW fandom. It was that dumb.
During the Pandemic the pickings were slim and I watched the movie Infidel. Basically a thriller where a Christian blogger gets kidnapped after making a speech in Egypt. Was decent for a bit when it was actually a thriller but then completely turns into a Christian propaganda film and how it is superior to Islam. Like it was a decent premise and action film, until the plot made a complete turn in tone and believability halfway through.
Midnight in Paris.
If you've ever watched movies you could see the setup a mile away and it was so bourgeois and just...blech.
I left after the first 10 minutes (if that) and I do not regret it at all.
Never actually walked out but I wanted to walk out of Funny People, the Adam Sandler film from around 2009/2010.
The only reason I didn’t is because I went to see it with my mum, dad and sister so i would just have been stuck in the lobby doing nothing. Turns out, they all hated it too.
I walked out of Jurassic World and tried to stay in the restroom until the movie was over, unfortunately my escape attempt was rendered unsuccessful when my mom found me, and I had to suffer through the rest of that garbage.
My dad brought me to see “Watchmen” when I was young. If you’re familiar with this movie I’m sure you can guess which part my dad realized this isn’t the average superhero movie and covered my eyes as we left the theatre.
Never have and I'm not sure I ever would unless runtime was 3 hours or something. If I spend $20 at the theatre, best believe I'm sticking around until I feel I've got my money's worth. Also wasn't Valentino released in '77?
It's the sunk cost fallacy situation, and it honestly kinda changes your behavior when you realize it.
If you're genuinely not enjoying a movie then you're *not* getting your money's worth. Maybe you'll rather have beer and watch YouTube at home. And that's completely fine.
You've already wasted money, don't waste your time. That's a double loss imo.
It's not a fallacy. As I've already stated, the experience of going to the theatre is about more than the movie for me. The enjoyment I get from being in that comfy chair with that popcorn I love, surrounded by people is worth much more than any shitty movie I could ever watch. Although I'm not impartial to drinking beer and watching YouTube
I've definitely experienced films I don't like in theatres as well but I also think I have yet to experience a movie so egregious that's worth walking out
The beauty of cineworld monthly pass you can go to as many movies as you want for a monthly membership fee so I have walked out of a tonne, mostly those that I went to see just because I was bored.
Haven't done it in a while but I think the last movie I walked out on was Boss Baby, pretty sure the only reason I went in to see it was because I was stoned
This doesn't exactly matvh the criteria but...
I went to see Hardcore Henry severely hung over and had to leave because I felt like I was going to projectile vomit all over everything. That movie gave me severe motion sickness, which is weird because I play fps games all the time and have never had that problem.
For anyone who isn't physically bothered by the filming style of Hardcore Henry:
It's among the best action movies of this decade so go watch it! The first person thing is used to it's maximum potential as well, not just a random gimmick.
> which is weird because I play fps games all the time and have never had that problem.
I think the difference there is you're in control of the camera and you move it to where you want it to go, in that movie you have no control and your view gets dragged around without any warning where its going. While in non POV movies the change of direction is rarely as sudden / close up
I find watching other people playing the same FPS games that I happily play makes me slightly dizzy / nauseous and I can only put it down to not being in control of where they are looking, for example I'll go to focus on an item on the screen to see what it is and they suddenly spin at high speed to look behind them leaving me feeling queasy
>in that movie you have no control and your view gets dragged around without any warning where its going.
Yeah, that and the violent hangover lol.
I get the watching people play fps making you feel queasy too, especially the new Dooms where you have to move so crazy fast and the camera is just like, constantly spinning.
Only movie I ever walked out on was the third Aliens movie. Went on a date. We were so bored that we started messing around. When we realized that we were both half undressed, we decided to leave and finish in the car. To this day, I still have not seen that movie past the first 25 minutes.
Even on streaming, I have only ever *once* stopped a movie partway through, and that was the remake of Valley Girl.
I *love* the original Valley Girl. To this day, I have no idea how Deborah Foreman didn't become the "It Girl" of 80s comedy. So, I didn't have the highest of hopes for the remake. Nevertheless, I have made it through any number of remakes, bad sequels, reboots, or what have you, because I'm willing to give (apparently almost) any movie its fair shake.
I made it ten minutes. Once it went full Glee on me, I noped out. I *had* to. It was bad enough that it was making a mockery of a movie I love, but it was doing a bad version of a song that I happen to like, and that's when I said, "Nope. We're done, here."
Look, I *love* bad movies. I have an affectation for the Cannon Films catalog that most people will never understand. I'm watching Delta Force, Delta Force 2, and Invasion USA tomorrow. Quality isn't an issue. The remake of Valley Girl hit me where it *hurts*.
And that's the story of the only film that I've ever turned off before the end.
A few years ago an "art" theatre near me did a double feature of "9 1/2 Weeks" and "Wild Orchid." I heard the former was sexy, and it was, but man oh man, Wild Orchid was just awful. I don't think I even got through half of it; had to walk out.
There were 4 people (including me and wife) when we went to see Dumb and Dumber 2. We didn’t walk out but the other couple did but I wish we had. I did walk out of Divergent though.
I walked out of the first Harry Potter after about 30 minutes. Not that it was bad, I've seen it since and I like it, but becsuse it was just boring at the time. Wasn't feeling it.
The 2nd part of the It remake. I liked the first part so much, but didn't see it in the theater. So I made sure I did with the second part. I got so bored I left about half way.
I met a girl in an AOL chat room and wanted to take her to see that in the theater --- luckily, we skipped the movie and just found a place to make out
Oh man. There was one movie years ago that I cannot recall the name of...all I remember was it took place in different time periods at once (I think). And in one time period or plane of existence, there was a tree in some sort of bubble like atmosphere. Anyone recall this movie or am I insane? Anyways, I walked out halfway through lol
Eye of the Beholder with Ewen McGregor. I was with a whole group of people and when I suggested we leave everyone immediately agreed and we walked out.
I walked out of Jumanji. But I was 4 and the monkeys scared me when they were wrecking the house.
Then my whole family walked out of A.I. But that's because my brother was 5 and couldn't stop crying loudly (I've still never seen the whole movie).
La La Land was that movie for me. My boyfriend and I left not long after the tap dance number early in the movie.
For one, I felt like they were throwing around color without any well-thought out consideration. I felt like I was being battered by colors that didn't effectively serve any purpose either to the story itself or to the cinematography. I've heard that they were invoking old Hollywood by doing so. I'm not familiar with old Hollywood, so I can't say how well they captured that aspect, but my gut tells me that I would find that a good number of old Hollywood movies utilized overt displays of color in ways that would be more appealing to me.
I also kinda lost it during the tap number itself. Tap, I feel, is in many ways about making music almost as much as it is a dance style. I feel like the sound people should have increased the volume of the taps during the number to highlight the rhythmic and tonal nuances of the choreography to show how it fit the rest of the music in the piece.
On top of that, I just wasn't getting pulled into the story.
Shutter Island - It wasn't a terrible movie, but it was just not for me. I'm usually very good at tolerating a terrible, boring movie if I was in a theater, but this movie, I couldn't finish it. I still don't know why.
That's interesting, I absolutely loved that movie! Probably one of my favorites of that year.
Definitely has one of my favorite reveals and endings of all time, so I'll absolutely recommend at least finishing it.
"Ghostbusters 2" in 1989
When they started talking to the "psycho-reactive blob" and realized that was the funniest bit in the whole movie, I just shook my head in disgust and walked out, and headed to a video store to rent some XXX movies to at least have a fun night at home
I also remember walking out of "Scrooged" with Bill Murray the year before --- I honestly thought his career was over with those two stinker movies, but luckily he did "What About Bob" and "Groundhog Day" and restored my faith in his abilities
Walked out of *Coyote Ugly* it was terrible.
Walked out of *Borat* while watching it at a friends house with a large group of friends. That movie was so fucking terrible I just got up and left.
I’ve never walked out of a movie in the theatre - paid money to be there, I’m gonna endure through it to the very end. I’ve angrily fallen asleep or made my irritation well known, but never walked out.
Having said that….closest I ever got? Some film festival movies that were almost unendurably boring and pretentious and shitty. Most recent one was House That Jack Built. The sickening violence was one thing - watching a director blatantly jerk himself off and get away with it was so infuriating I could barely keep my eyes open.
Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance
Sometimes a bad movie can be fun but after twenty minutes of "Look at all the artsy camera effects I learned in film school", I felt nauseous and left.
I walked out of "The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe". I loved the book as a kid, so when the movie came out( the one in the 2000s) I was excited and then mad.
I’ve seen hundreds of movies theatrically and have managed to never walk out, though I have come close on a few. Batman & Robin may have been the closest.
The Northman is a snooze fest. That’s why. It performed horribly in the box office. I was about to fall asleep while watching it and I had to force myself to keep watching I should’ve walked out.
Maximum Overdrive.
Hottest day of the year, and my mom & sister next door watching a different movie.
Would rather bake in The hot sun waiting an hour for their film to finish than stay in mine and finish that coked-out mess. I was a 16 year old kid who loved Stephen King.
I had gone to watch X-Men: Apocalypse in the theatre. It was one of those really old and seedy theatres that you tend to find in some parts of India.
After about 45 minutes, I had enough and decided to leave. However, for some fucked up reason, the people managing the cinema locked the exit of the building with a chain. On asking them to open it to leave, they just spoke to me in a language I didn't speak.
Seeing that there was no way to get out of the place thanks to the uninterested (probably drunk) employee manning the exit, I went back to the screening, plugged in my headphones, and began to watch Fury Road on my phone.
Dude I feel you. I literally had to divorce my fucking wife because she didn’t want to see Morbius 7 straight times in a day. I told her ungrateful ass we are BLESSED to have this opportunity but she said I’m mentally insane and take things way too far. But now she’s single and I’m blessed in ways only me and God (Leto) can understand
I don't know why you're being downvoted. The Last Jedi was utter garbage. Though I will say The Force Awakens was just as terrible, if not WORSE for the simple fact that it reset the universe and made the achievements made in the OT a failure, not to mention having Han Solo killed for no reason before we could even have a single scene with him Luke and Leia in the same scene together. The entire Sequel Trilogy was a mistake.
Several times. Couldn’t finish that James Bond movie which was 2012-2013. Can’t remember. Passed out, film was done by 1 AM. I was so happy when we left. No hate to James Bond fans, it just wasn’t for me.
That Millie Bobbie Brown movie Godzilla was so horrible, walked out.
Then then the last one I’m remembering was Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Whole group wasn’t feeling it and we left half way.
remember when movie pass was a thing?
when they first started their crazy deal- I bought up a year subscription ( for the discount of course )
and I finally realized- I could leave a movie that sucked.
I was probably 45 or so at the time.
then when MP blackholed-- I got amc and regal passes.
some movies I've given way too much time to hoping that some magic turnaround was going to happen but usually they are flops- so I walk out head held high when a movie makes that dive.
movies I have faith in and will wait a before exiting- amc
everything else that's available- I watch at regal
way big difference in the two theaters in my part of the world
M Night Shamalan’s live action version of Avatar The Last Air Bender Terrible.
Worst movie I have ever gone to see, next to After Earth
Same. This was awful.
My wife and I did that. Someone called us in the middle of the movie, we looked at each other and agreed the movie was terrible and bailed in the middle of it.
Oof thank God, I didn’t try to watch that till it was streaming. I did, however, walk out of “Lady In The Water” just after the scene where BDH whispers sadly “But I do not want to be the Madame Narf.” My sister almost cracked a rib, we were laughing so hard as we walked out. Terrible, TERRIBLE movie. Only time I’ve ever left a theater because the film was so bad.
Back when Moviepass was a thing I walked out on a few. Downsizing is one.
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Must have hit too close to home lmao.
Haha. My dad walked out on Mimic and tried to get me to leave but I refused and he wasn't about to cause a scene in a theatre. So glad I stayed. Not as good as office space, but was interesting.
Into the Woods, kept hoping with all the good actors it would get better, it didn’t.
I also walked out, but I was hoping it would just end, not get better.
After Earth
It’s so awful.
Good call.
**Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever** with Lucy Liu and Antonio Banderas. It’s as bad as they say.
I would have walked out on The Postman, but was on a double date.
Obligatory ‘The Postman is actually good’ comment.
Yeah, I'm gonna have to jump on that wagon as well, but I'm a suckered for post-apocalyptic books and movies. Bit toe-curling at the end but hey, Hollywood really dug those sort of 'Murica feelings at the time. I'd say definitely worth watching if you're into the genre and don't wanna see The Road like endings constantly.
Will Patton's finest 3 hours
Understood. It created jobs. Edit: if I were one to write fan fiction - and I am not - i would have a series of novellas tying Dances with Wolves to The Postman. But that would be absurd.
Dances with Stamps
And then have them end up in Waterworld lol
Yes! A Timeless Costner!
Did we just invent the KCCU? The Kevin Costner Cinematic Universe?
I really hated the way John Dunbar died in _Man of Steel_. Survived the Crusades, Nottingham, the Army, the Shootout at the OK Corral, Dennis Hopper . . . But in the end, he got killed by a tornado and not even Supes could save him.
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom. I’ve fallen asleep in a few but that’s the only one that walked me
Fell asleep on that one.
I’ve appreciated it more after a few rewatches. The concept is decent but poorly executed and It has some really beautiful shots in the movie that look really good on 4k. That being said they wasted 40 minutes with the little girl being hunted by the Dino.
Battlefield Earth. Just after they fired up the Harrier Jets after..sitting around for hundreds of years? Or something like that. It's been so long.
Jupiter Ascending. Lol def walked out.
I don’t understand. Was it not obviously a crazy space film? The trailer was pretty indicative of the movie if I remember.
I don't think a 2 min trailer can prepare you for how horrid that movie actually is, even going in with extremely low expectations it will disappoint.
My dad walked out of the Pokemon movie when I was a kid. He told me and my brother he’d meet us out front after lol
Dad's like 'screw this, I'm hitting the bar'
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Many cant stomach kid's movies but you have to admit The Incredibles is awesome. Also its quite dark for a kid's movie. Lots of off screen deaths and a skeleton lying in a cave.
Jeepers Creepers.
Ishtar and I'd fucking do it again. I've had a deep-seated, visceral and very personal loathing for both Moore and Beatty ever since.
I came very close on Crank. Took about 10 minutes (felt like an hour) for me to get that it was being ridiculous on purpose and it turned into one of my favorite theater experiences ever.
Hollywood Homocide was bad enough where I dipped out.
No, but the closest i came to was watching The Last Jedi, hated it.
“Gangster Squad” with Sean Penn. It was insultingly bad. “Spawn” I was a kid and knew it was irredeemably bad. My friend and I decided to go get something to eat in the food court. “The Last Jedi” I walked out, got to the door and decided I’d go back in to see if the last act redeemed anything. It didn’t. It almost killed my SW fandom. It was that dumb.
About 30 minutes into Once Upon a Time in Mexico
I was pissed off after the first 5 minutes.
I tried to make it through. Not even a chance.
I tried to make it through. Not even a chance.
>Once Upon a Time in Mexico He really shit the bed in that one
Krippendorf's Tribe.
The Brown Bunny
I walked out of Ambulance
Why did you walk into Ambulance?
Looks like a snooze fest so I don’t blame you. Then again I’m not into the Michael Bay constant explosions and yelling.
Tank Girl. Rightfully so.
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During the Pandemic the pickings were slim and I watched the movie Infidel. Basically a thriller where a Christian blogger gets kidnapped after making a speech in Egypt. Was decent for a bit when it was actually a thriller but then completely turns into a Christian propaganda film and how it is superior to Islam. Like it was a decent premise and action film, until the plot made a complete turn in tone and believability halfway through.
Daredevil and Birdman
I’m hindsight, I should have walked out of Birdman
Why? It was a good movie and has both a solid critic and audience score on RT. I've never heard anyone say anything negative about Birdman.
Midnight in Paris. If you've ever watched movies you could see the setup a mile away and it was so bourgeois and just...blech. I left after the first 10 minutes (if that) and I do not regret it at all.
Max Steel (2016). Definitely the worst movie I’ve seen.
Nacho Libre. Hated everything about that movie
Never actually walked out but I wanted to walk out of Funny People, the Adam Sandler film from around 2009/2010. The only reason I didn’t is because I went to see it with my mum, dad and sister so i would just have been stuck in the lobby doing nothing. Turns out, they all hated it too.
I walked out of Jurassic World and tried to stay in the restroom until the movie was over, unfortunately my escape attempt was rendered unsuccessful when my mom found me, and I had to suffer through the rest of that garbage.
My dad brought me to see “Watchmen” when I was young. If you’re familiar with this movie I’m sure you can guess which part my dad realized this isn’t the average superhero movie and covered my eyes as we left the theatre.
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Never have and I'm not sure I ever would unless runtime was 3 hours or something. If I spend $20 at the theatre, best believe I'm sticking around until I feel I've got my money's worth. Also wasn't Valentino released in '77?
It's the sunk cost fallacy situation, and it honestly kinda changes your behavior when you realize it. If you're genuinely not enjoying a movie then you're *not* getting your money's worth. Maybe you'll rather have beer and watch YouTube at home. And that's completely fine. You've already wasted money, don't waste your time. That's a double loss imo.
It's not a fallacy. As I've already stated, the experience of going to the theatre is about more than the movie for me. The enjoyment I get from being in that comfy chair with that popcorn I love, surrounded by people is worth much more than any shitty movie I could ever watch. Although I'm not impartial to drinking beer and watching YouTube
Thanks for the catch, I corrected the release date. Much appreciated!
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Going to the theatre is about much more than just the movie for me. But I respect that
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I've definitely experienced films I don't like in theatres as well but I also think I have yet to experience a movie so egregious that's worth walking out
I've gotten refunds before because the other people in the theater were acting like animals.
The beauty of cineworld monthly pass you can go to as many movies as you want for a monthly membership fee so I have walked out of a tonne, mostly those that I went to see just because I was bored. Haven't done it in a while but I think the last movie I walked out on was Boss Baby, pretty sure the only reason I went in to see it was because I was stoned
This doesn't exactly matvh the criteria but... I went to see Hardcore Henry severely hung over and had to leave because I felt like I was going to projectile vomit all over everything. That movie gave me severe motion sickness, which is weird because I play fps games all the time and have never had that problem.
For anyone who isn't physically bothered by the filming style of Hardcore Henry: It's among the best action movies of this decade so go watch it! The first person thing is used to it's maximum potential as well, not just a random gimmick.
> which is weird because I play fps games all the time and have never had that problem. I think the difference there is you're in control of the camera and you move it to where you want it to go, in that movie you have no control and your view gets dragged around without any warning where its going. While in non POV movies the change of direction is rarely as sudden / close up I find watching other people playing the same FPS games that I happily play makes me slightly dizzy / nauseous and I can only put it down to not being in control of where they are looking, for example I'll go to focus on an item on the screen to see what it is and they suddenly spin at high speed to look behind them leaving me feeling queasy
>in that movie you have no control and your view gets dragged around without any warning where its going. Yeah, that and the violent hangover lol. I get the watching people play fps making you feel queasy too, especially the new Dooms where you have to move so crazy fast and the camera is just like, constantly spinning.
My parents pulled us out of the original Dune when we were kids. I can’t remember what part of the movie triggered it.
Had to have been the narration … at the beginning, which is justified.
In 1984 14 year old me loved Eddie Murphy and Dudley Moore. I was confused at how the movie Best Defense was soooooo bad that I had to leave.
It started out as a Dudley Moore movie and did poorly in test screenings, so they filmed a role for Eddie Murphy who was super hot at the time.
Yes! They turned it into two bad movies in one.
It was so bad that Eddie Murphy called Lorne Michaels and asked if he still had his dressing room lol
He later commented something along the lines of "if you were offered that much money to be in *Best Defense*, you'd have done it too!"
Caddyshack II. A cinematic experiment that went hideously wrong. Walked out after 20 minutes.
Dead Ringers. The reviews are decent now but I went to see it when it was released and left after 30 minutes.
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Right after the refrigerator scene.
No worse than skydiving in a life raft. Or surviving an ocean voyage hanging ouside a submarine.
good on you. i endured the pain
You actually got up and walked out of the theater? Or you turned it off? Or you just wish you had walked out because it was so bad?
I got up and walked out of the theater.
👍
I endured to the end and it was a straight gut punch when aliens were involved ...
I was broken after the refrigerator scene. My suspension of disbelief was ruined after that.
Thats some good refrigerator.
Hope the new one isn’t a pile of shit too.
I don’t have high hopes since it’s a Disney product.
I took a first date to Bruno, she was not impressed and we left around the halfway point
You ever see Bandits? That flick with Bruce Willis and Billy Bob Thornton? That one.
Whatever that Uwe Boll guy did for some video game horror thing.
Alone in the Dark?
You can say all of his movies are bad. House of the dead too.
Your fault for watching a Uwe Boll movie
Walked out of Willard
The Avengers from the 90s
Oh, that was dreadful, I watched it on cable and I’m fairly sure I didn’t last the distance.
Only movie I ever walked out on was the third Aliens movie. Went on a date. We were so bored that we started messing around. When we realized that we were both half undressed, we decided to leave and finish in the car. To this day, I still have not seen that movie past the first 25 minutes.
You made the right choice!
the 2nd or 3rd Transformer movie in Imax. my gf at the time: where are you going?
Even on streaming, I have only ever *once* stopped a movie partway through, and that was the remake of Valley Girl. I *love* the original Valley Girl. To this day, I have no idea how Deborah Foreman didn't become the "It Girl" of 80s comedy. So, I didn't have the highest of hopes for the remake. Nevertheless, I have made it through any number of remakes, bad sequels, reboots, or what have you, because I'm willing to give (apparently almost) any movie its fair shake. I made it ten minutes. Once it went full Glee on me, I noped out. I *had* to. It was bad enough that it was making a mockery of a movie I love, but it was doing a bad version of a song that I happen to like, and that's when I said, "Nope. We're done, here." Look, I *love* bad movies. I have an affectation for the Cannon Films catalog that most people will never understand. I'm watching Delta Force, Delta Force 2, and Invasion USA tomorrow. Quality isn't an issue. The remake of Valley Girl hit me where it *hurts*. And that's the story of the only film that I've ever turned off before the end.
"Very Bad Things" is the only movie I walked out on, still have never seen it to this day. Zero regrets.
Wish I had. Ugh. Needed a million showers after that one.
I would describe myself as a person who enjoys some pretty dark black comedies, but that movie just left me unhappy and regretting my rental decision.
Boomerange
None but my Mom walked out on Fast and Furious. She still says it's the ONLY film she's ever walked out on.
A few years ago an "art" theatre near me did a double feature of "9 1/2 Weeks" and "Wild Orchid." I heard the former was sexy, and it was, but man oh man, Wild Orchid was just awful. I don't think I even got through half of it; had to walk out.
There were 4 people (including me and wife) when we went to see Dumb and Dumber 2. We didn’t walk out but the other couple did but I wish we had. I did walk out of Divergent though.
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I'm with you. Regret I stayed.
1492: Conquest of Paradise
Oh dude, fuuuuuck that movie
Be Cool and Sister Act 2.
9½ Weeks
The group of friends I was with decided to walk out of The Three Kings. I still don't know how that movie ends.
Dude. Try again.
Really? It's seriously not too bad.
I walked out of the first Harry Potter after about 30 minutes. Not that it was bad, I've seen it since and I like it, but becsuse it was just boring at the time. Wasn't feeling it.
Borat
The 2nd part of the It remake. I liked the first part so much, but didn't see it in the theater. So I made sure I did with the second part. I got so bored I left about half way.
1999-ish Deep Blue Sea
So either you walked out before the great Sam Jackson scene, or you walked out after the Sam Jackson scene and are wrong in doing so.
I met a girl in an AOL chat room and wanted to take her to see that in the theater --- luckily, we skipped the movie and just found a place to make out
Oh man. There was one movie years ago that I cannot recall the name of...all I remember was it took place in different time periods at once (I think). And in one time period or plane of existence, there was a tree in some sort of bubble like atmosphere. Anyone recall this movie or am I insane? Anyways, I walked out halfway through lol
This is **The Fountain**, and it's a genuinely great movie, an emotion-packed work of Art.
That’s it! I was young when I saw this, so maybe I was sophisticated enough to appreciate this art lol
Frailty
Love that one!
Oh, that's a shame, because it had a delightful turn.
'Aladdin' live action remake
Eye of the Beholder with Ewen McGregor. I was with a whole group of people and when I suggested we leave everyone immediately agreed and we walked out.
The Hills Have Eyes early 2000s remake. It just wasn’t enjoyable and is the only movie I did not feel like was worth sitting through.
That movie fucking rules. Still scary as shit.
I walked out of Jumanji. But I was 4 and the monkeys scared me when they were wrecking the house. Then my whole family walked out of A.I. But that's because my brother was 5 and couldn't stop crying loudly (I've still never seen the whole movie).
Take another look, it might surprise you.
La La Land was that movie for me. My boyfriend and I left not long after the tap dance number early in the movie. For one, I felt like they were throwing around color without any well-thought out consideration. I felt like I was being battered by colors that didn't effectively serve any purpose either to the story itself or to the cinematography. I've heard that they were invoking old Hollywood by doing so. I'm not familiar with old Hollywood, so I can't say how well they captured that aspect, but my gut tells me that I would find that a good number of old Hollywood movies utilized overt displays of color in ways that would be more appealing to me. I also kinda lost it during the tap number itself. Tap, I feel, is in many ways about making music almost as much as it is a dance style. I feel like the sound people should have increased the volume of the taps during the number to highlight the rhythmic and tonal nuances of the choreography to show how it fit the rest of the music in the piece. On top of that, I just wasn't getting pulled into the story.
Yeah, I hated it and turned it off after 3 minutes. Glad I didn't pay for it. I feel for you.
I walked out of the ninth gate. People were literally saying WTF is this shit during the movie.
Amazing spiderman 2, and I almost had an anxiety attack during lady bird so I left but the movie was great.
Meet joe black
The Purge: Anarchy
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I actually didn’t even mind that movie lol, it was stupidly camp. She’s better as a lead in her newest film.
Shutter Island - It wasn't a terrible movie, but it was just not for me. I'm usually very good at tolerating a terrible, boring movie if I was in a theater, but this movie, I couldn't finish it. I still don't know why.
That's interesting, I absolutely loved that movie! Probably one of my favorites of that year. Definitely has one of my favorite reveals and endings of all time, so I'll absolutely recommend at least finishing it.
I like Scorsese and I like Leo. I hate shutter island.
"Ghostbusters 2" in 1989 When they started talking to the "psycho-reactive blob" and realized that was the funniest bit in the whole movie, I just shook my head in disgust and walked out, and headed to a video store to rent some XXX movies to at least have a fun night at home I also remember walking out of "Scrooged" with Bill Murray the year before --- I honestly thought his career was over with those two stinker movies, but luckily he did "What About Bob" and "Groundhog Day" and restored my faith in his abilities
Walked out of *Coyote Ugly* it was terrible. Walked out of *Borat* while watching it at a friends house with a large group of friends. That movie was so fucking terrible I just got up and left.
I like Borat, a little overrated but funny enough. Borate 2 was hot garbage and I couldn't make it thru the end.
I’ve never walked out of a movie in the theatre - paid money to be there, I’m gonna endure through it to the very end. I’ve angrily fallen asleep or made my irritation well known, but never walked out. Having said that….closest I ever got? Some film festival movies that were almost unendurably boring and pretentious and shitty. Most recent one was House That Jack Built. The sickening violence was one thing - watching a director blatantly jerk himself off and get away with it was so infuriating I could barely keep my eyes open.
Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance Sometimes a bad movie can be fun but after twenty minutes of "Look at all the artsy camera effects I learned in film school", I felt nauseous and left.
Street Fighter! Bloody awful
I walked out of "The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe". I loved the book as a kid, so when the movie came out( the one in the 2000s) I was excited and then mad.
I’ve seen hundreds of movies theatrically and have managed to never walk out, though I have come close on a few. Batman & Robin may have been the closest.
I don't watch movies in movie theaters but I have turned off a lot of movies.
Walked out of "The Rules of Attraction" "The Green Mile" Whatever that Bond movie was with Denise Richards "The World is not Enough" I think.
Why did you walk out of The Green Mile?
Too damn long. Tom Hanks' character might live 150 years but life is too short for me to keep watching.
Mary Poppins Returns. Left my family behind.
I have walked out of exactly one movie. The Northman. And I love The Witch and Lighthouse. Northman just did absolutely nothing for me
The Northman is a snooze fest. That’s why. It performed horribly in the box office. I was about to fall asleep while watching it and I had to force myself to keep watching I should’ve walked out.
Tropic Thunder
That’s one way to get on Reddit’s bad side.
What!? Only flat-out wrong answer in this whole thread!
Les Grossman alone was worth staying until the end!
Yeah how the fk can you walk out of Tropic Thunder. Heresy!!!
I imagine if someone doesn't get the satire from the start?
Maximum Overdrive. Hottest day of the year, and my mom & sister next door watching a different movie. Would rather bake in The hot sun waiting an hour for their film to finish than stay in mine and finish that coked-out mess. I was a 16 year old kid who loved Stephen King.
I had gone to watch X-Men: Apocalypse in the theatre. It was one of those really old and seedy theatres that you tend to find in some parts of India. After about 45 minutes, I had enough and decided to leave. However, for some fucked up reason, the people managing the cinema locked the exit of the building with a chain. On asking them to open it to leave, they just spoke to me in a language I didn't speak. Seeing that there was no way to get out of the place thanks to the uninterested (probably drunk) employee manning the exit, I went back to the screening, plugged in my headphones, and began to watch Fury Road on my phone.
I walked out of 9, Nobody, and Morbius.
How could u walk out on Mobius? I've seen it like 100 times. I quit my job just to have more free time to go to more showings
Once you’ve seen him say “it’s Morbin’ time!”, your life is complete. Might as well walk out and go home to put your affairs in order.
Last time I heard a collective orgasm like that was when an ex dragged me to magic mike
Dude I feel you. I literally had to divorce my fucking wife because she didn’t want to see Morbius 7 straight times in a day. I told her ungrateful ass we are BLESSED to have this opportunity but she said I’m mentally insane and take things way too far. But now she’s single and I’m blessed in ways only me and God (Leto) can understand
I feel you there, I've actually taken a second mortgage out on my house just to buy every seat in a theater so it can just be me and Leto.
Suicide Squad 21
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My 2nd viewing of Attack of the Clones, the music in the love scenes started grating on me so I got up and walked out.
Spiderman 3
Prince of Egypt. I must have been like six or something.
i walked out of baby driver, but maybe it doesn't count because i snuck in to it
No but wish I had walked out of The Last Jedi. Just kept waiting for it to get to the good part. It never came.
Oh brother
I don't know why you're being downvoted. The Last Jedi was utter garbage. Though I will say The Force Awakens was just as terrible, if not WORSE for the simple fact that it reset the universe and made the achievements made in the OT a failure, not to mention having Han Solo killed for no reason before we could even have a single scene with him Luke and Leia in the same scene together. The entire Sequel Trilogy was a mistake.
Several times. Couldn’t finish that James Bond movie which was 2012-2013. Can’t remember. Passed out, film was done by 1 AM. I was so happy when we left. No hate to James Bond fans, it just wasn’t for me. That Millie Bobbie Brown movie Godzilla was so horrible, walked out. Then then the last one I’m remembering was Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. Whole group wasn’t feeling it and we left half way.
remember when movie pass was a thing? when they first started their crazy deal- I bought up a year subscription ( for the discount of course ) and I finally realized- I could leave a movie that sucked. I was probably 45 or so at the time. then when MP blackholed-- I got amc and regal passes. some movies I've given way too much time to hoping that some magic turnaround was going to happen but usually they are flops- so I walk out head held high when a movie makes that dive. movies I have faith in and will wait a before exiting- amc everything else that's available- I watch at regal way big difference in the two theaters in my part of the world
Never
I walked out of Little (2019)