Here's what I've seen in the last few weeks, in a bunch - IMDB tells me I haven't seen a decent film since April. These won't help.
Spider-Man: No Way Home (Watts, 2021) - I liked the first 2 Marvel spidey movies quite a bit, this one is trying too much to be cute, and only aims to please. 3/10
Mystery Date (Wacks, 1991) - Not much mystery, or anything else, but it kind of works as what it is, and it has a young Ethan Hawke - not the worst film I've seen as part of my deal with the gf. 3/10
Hustle (Zagar, 2022) - Nothing very original, but I liked the first half. Sanders is too limited an actor to make this more than banal. 4/10
Jour J (Wedding Unplanned, Kherici, 2017) - Also the result of my deal with the gf - terrible, terrible French movie from a lady director who loves to film herself (terribly weak as a director, not much better as an actress). 2/10
Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City (Roberts, 2022) - The original adaptation wasn't very good, but it had kind of a signature and was original enough to do its own thing. This is just nerds doing an "homage" to a video game. The characters have just as much depth as they had in the game, which makes it impossible to care about anything going on. 2/10
Heart of Champions (Mailer, 2021) - I'm a coach, so I tend to like coaches stories. This is paint-by-numbers bullshit that you've seen many times before. They need to go to extremes to try to get a little drama and tension, and it absolutely fails. 2/10 (and that's generous)
Spiderhead (Kosinski, 2022) - The most disappointing entry here. The premise is far-fetched enough that you really believe it's going somewhere unexpected, and so the first half is pretty interesting. Too bad, it gets so plain and flat that it's actually impressive how much they managed to mess it up. Watch the first half if you must, but leave it at that. 3/10
Thor: Ragnarok (Waititi, 2017) - Re-watch. It's a dumb film, but on entertainment/fun alone, it's very close to being the best Marvel film. 4.5/10 (probably a tad generous, but it's the best film of this list)
Blacklight (Williams, 2022) - I can't understand why anybody would hire Liam Neeson for a role like that. He typecasted himself into a character that he never could play to begin with, but now it's just ridiculous - way too old, way too stiff, way too bored. Other than that, it's a formulaic entry. 2.5/10
Glitch! (Mastorakis, 1988) - Re-watch (well, 30-some years later). Now we're talking. This is so dumb, so overacted, so cheap too, that it kind of works. The comedy is so off that it's kind of funny. What's the most puzzling is how someone like Nico Mastorakis ended up directing that kind of stuff - someone really needs to produce a documentary on this man's life. So bad it's good. 1/10
Joysticks (Clark, 1983) - After Glitch!, TUBI proposed me this one, so I bit. It's dumber, cheaper, and even (way) more overacted. The comedy is so off that it's totally absurd and Greydon Clark is exactly the type of bum that you'd expect to direct such a terrible excuse to show some naked ladies. It's just not the same thing, but I guess it could work for some. If you're old and nostalgic of the video arcades you might find it cute. I'll rate it as 'so bad it's good', but it's more absurdly terrible than fun. 1/10