RiffTrax Movie Requests
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We get thousands of Movie Suggestions to @RiffTrax, FB.com/RiffTrax, even to +RiffTrax This is the BEST place for them. SEARCH to see if you’re the first to suggest a film, and of course Vote for your favorites!
Tell us 3 good reasons your movie should be considered. Include photos and links and your suggestion MAY end up on RiffTrax.com or in movie theaters for RiffTrax LIVE!
PLEASE NOTE: Adding your suggestions here requires a separate account for ideas.rifftrax.com
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7496 results found
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Shark Attack 3: Megadalon
Bad dubbing, a male lead with no interest in any of the females in the movie, special effects that have to be seen to be believed, bad use of stock footage and props, and one of the greatest movie lines ever uttered (not written as it was improvised by the actor).
57 votes -
16 votes
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legend of the chupacabra
Its a different kind of monster movie; I think you guys will enjoy riffing this one, provided you partake of the smoking of 3 big fat blunts!
17 votes -
Timerider the Adventures of Lyle Swann
Fred Ward accidently goes back in time and unknowingly becomes his own ancestor
35 votes -
Tales from the Crypt (1972)/Vault of Horror (1973)
Tales from the Crypt (1972): Long before HBO and EC Comics got together with the CryptKeeper, Hammer films gave some of these tales in England their variation on it.
The tale begins with five people taking a tour in a catacomb (no kidding, what was this? 'The Addams Family' Tour) and get lost. Instead of running into a decaying, pun-riddled corpse, the Crypt-Keeper they meet happens to be a dashing Englishman wearing a suit (Crypts in England must be elegant over there).
Before they realize it, he spins five tales. The first one, ironically, is the EC Tales of the Crypt, 'And All Through the House..' With Joan Collins no less, and a homicidal maniac dressed as Santa Claus.
The second one deals with a tripping philanderer experiencing his own death, in a dream before his death (yeah, I don't get it either, look you just have to watch this one..)
The Third One has former Grand Moff Tarkin/Doctor Who, Peter Cushing, who plays a kind, retired sanitation worker, who is resented by his snobbish neighbors. (Can't imagine why.) So his neighbors attempt to smear his reputation, but as with these type of films, things don't go according to plan.
Tale #4: Sort of a weird take on "The Monkey's Paw," but considering Ape Law was enforced in England (strange), the wish-granting device is a Chinese figurine. Rather than bore you with the details, this also enforces the 'Be careful what you wish for,' moral.
The Final Tale is a typical cliche: Director of an asylum is a major pudhball, and gets his comeuppance (there's a word you don't hear anymore, hmm?) with the patients (led by 'John Steed,' Patrick McNee).
But the big shocker here is the visitors.. well, let's not spoil it, shall we?
Vault of Horror (1973): Also made by Hammer Films and loosely based on the EC Comic of the same name.
This time round, no crypt in general, but five men somehow trapped in the basement of the office building, where rather than discuss sales figures, stock options and what was on television the night before, they talk about their own demise. (whoa, talk about your grim meetings)
Besides the other four, the most memorable one stars the famous Doctor Who of them all, Tom Baker, who plays a disgruntled painter who gets revenge on his critics with some mystic paint and portraits. (Hey, works for me)
Anyway, these films would be excellent for the RiffTrax crew to take a crack at mainly because these anthology films were indeed unintentionally funny, if not disturbing than scary.
So, whaddya think, sirs?
Tales from the Crypt (1972): Long before HBO and EC Comics got together with the CryptKeeper, Hammer films gave some of these tales in England their variation on it.
The tale begins with five people taking a tour in a catacomb (no kidding, what was this? 'The Addams Family' Tour) and get lost. Instead of running into a decaying, pun-riddled corpse, the Crypt-Keeper they meet happens to be a dashing Englishman wearing a suit (Crypts in England must be elegant over there).
Before they realize it, he spins five tales. The first one, ironically, is the EC Tales of the…
33 votes -
66 votes
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Our Mr. Sun (1956) [SHORT]
Academy Award winner Frank Capra (IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON) wrote and directed this children's documentary about the Sun. A mix of Animation and Live-Action, this Two-Part Short is barely an hour long, and is in the Public Domain. Lionel Barrymore (Mr. Potter of IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE) lends his voice to Father Time.
25 votes -
The Gingerdead Man
This stinker has Gary Busse! What could be better then that? Only you making this film hilarious!
59 votes -
6 votes
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Empire of the Ants
Empire of the Ants (1977)
Bert I. Gordon must be stopped!55 votes -
Jason And The Argonauts (1963)
This movie is a classic in terms of the, at the time, revolutionary animation and filming techniques, but thankfully due to its age it's perfect for a good Riffing!
33 votes -
Voyage to the Prehistoric Planet (1965)
US edited version of a Russian Sci-Fi movie about astronauts and their robot, John, exploring the planet Venus and its prehistoric lifeforms. Former SHERLOCK HOLMES Basil Rathbone and Faith Domergue of THIS ISLAND EARTH star in this fantastic tale set in 2020.
37 votes -
Rocky IV
Obviously the most politically and culturally relevant of all the 'Rocky' epics. The movie that ended not only the Cold War, but James Brown's career. Dolph Lundgren's performance won him an Oscar for Most Dumbfounded Expression in a Sports Movie. This must be riffed before Putin reforms the empire!
38 votes -
Food of the Gods
The Food of the Gods (1976)
Bert I. Gordon strikes again. Schlocky 70's monster movie. It has huge wasps, huget rats and huge Marjoe Gortner overacting. Makes "Night of the Lepus" look like 2001 by comparison. "Loosely" based on an H.G. Wells story which means they just basically stole the title.55 votes -
Crash (2006)
The greatest afterschool special of all time!
11 votes -
38 votes
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Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and At World's End
The first is riffed... why not the sequels?
66 votes -
In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale
An absolutely delightful, awful fantasy movie. Uwe Boll, Burt Reynolds (complete with royal rug), sylvan defenders on loan from Cirque du Soleil, and a 4% from RT. Yes, this movie has it all. Boll's cinematographic vision seems to have been providing a very yellow aura to the early scenes of the film; after that, he clearly lost interest.
54 votes -
The Marine (2006)
No one says action than the Mister Rogers of WWE, John Cena
30 votes -
17 votes