20 Movies That Critics Were Wrong About

Movie critics and the general public rarely see eye-to-eye

Somewhere between finding showtimes in the back pages of the local newspaper and the inception of Rotten Tomatoes. The review aggregation website, which has its own Facebook-like origin story from the minds of three University of California, Berkeley students in the 1990s, started as a place where people could “get access to reviews from a variety of different critics.” The composite of these reviews took the form of the Rotten Tomatoes score, a percentage out of 100 that would become both revered and feared in Hollywood. Keeping to the tomato motif, any film with a score greater than 60 percent on the Tomatometer is considered “fresh,” while those failing to hit that threshold get slapped with the “rotten” label. 

In 2019, the website restructured a similar function for moviegoers with the Audience Score, allowing verified watchers to rank movies on a five-star scale and establish a second percentage score for films. While the Audience Score offered a different perspective for the masses, it also highlighted a common disparity in Hollywood: the critics and the general public don’t always see eye-to-eye. 

All of which is to say, we saw the best movies of our generation destroyed by a Rotten Tomatoes score. In fact, here are just a few that Twitter s think critics were certifiably wrong about… 

Scooby-Doo (2002)

Speed Racer (2008)

Underworld (2003)

Venom (2018) and Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021)

Mallrats (1995)

Hook (1991)

Hot Rod (2007)

Drop Dead Gorgeous (1999)

But I’m A Cheerleader (1999)

Uptown Girls (2003)

She’s the Man (2006)

Death Becomes Her (1992)

Jumanji (1995)

I, Robot (2004)

Godzilla: King of Monsters (2019)

Now and Then (1995)

Man of Steel (2013)

Hotel Transylvania (2012)

National Treasure (2004) and National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007)

Twilight

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