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Ten of the Earliest Recorded Near-Death Experiences

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10 Movies That Accurately Portray Mental Health Issues

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10 Origins of Commonly Used Phrases

10 Bizarre Superstitions of 19th-Century Baseball Players

10 Strange Cases of Historical Remains Split Up after Death

10 More People Who Survived Falling from Extreme Heights
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Jamie Frater
Head Editor
Jamie founded Listverse due to an insatiable desire to share fascinating, obscure, and bizarre facts. He has been a guest speaker on numerous national radio and television stations and is a five time published author.
More About Us
Ten of the Most Disturbing Things to Serve for Dinner

10 Ambitious Projects Aimed at Resurrecting Extinct Animals

Ten of the Earliest Recorded Near-Death Experiences

Ten Controversial News Stories Surrounding ChatGPT

10 Movies That Accurately Portray Mental Health Issues

10 Things History Gets Totally Wrong about the Black Plague

10 Origins of Commonly Used Phrases
Your View: What Is The Worst Movie That Everyone Loves?
Listverse readers who have been here since our inception nine years ago will remember a regular feature we used to have called “Your View”. Basically we propose a question, answer it ourselves, and then ask you to tell us what you think.
I have decided this week that we will bring this feature back to help us all get to know each other better, and, perhaps most importantly, to share our knowledge with others here.
So, this week’s Your View question is: “What Is The Worst Movie That Everyone Loves?”
My answer is: “Crash” from 2004, directed by Paul Haggis and starring Sandra Bullock, Ryan Phillippe, and Matt Dillon. It scores a whopping 7.8 on IMDB and won the Oscar for the best picture at the 78th Academy Awards.
I have watched this film numerous times hoping I might have been wrong about it the last time. While I totally get the premise of showing how harmful racism can be, each scene of racism depicted comes across as completely farcical. It is like someone who has never seen actual racism said “this is what racism must look like!” and then put it in the script.
Some of the acting was good (as you would expect with the likes of Ryan Phillippe who can be excellent at times) but the story line and scripting was so clearly trying to send a message that the actual message got lost.
This film is to racism, what Disney’s magic castle is to Hohenzollern Castle.