"So bad it's good" The critic
Michael Medved characterized examples of the "so bad it's good" class of low-budget cult film through books such as
The Golden Turkey Awards. These films include financially fruitless and critically scorned films that have become inadvertent comedies to film buffs, such as
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957),
Mommie Dearest (1981),
The Room (2003), and the Ugandan action comedy film
Who Killed Captain Alex? (2010). Similarly,
Paul Verhoeven's
Showgirls (1995) bombed in theaters but developed a cult following on video. Catching on,
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer capitalized on the film's ironic appeal and marketed it as a cult film. Sometimes, fans will impose their own interpretation of films which have attracted derision, such as reinterpreting an earnest melodrama as a comedy.
Alamo Drafthouse programmer Zack Carlson has further said that any film which succeeds in entertaining an audience is good regardless of irony. In
francophone culture, "so bad it's good" films are known as . The rise of the Internet and on-demand films has led critics to question whether "so bad it's good" films have a future now that people have such diverse options in both availability and catalog, though fans eager to experience the worst films ever made can lead to lucrative showings for local theaters and merchandisers.
Camp and guilty pleasures Chuck Kleinhans states that the difference between a guilty pleasure and a cult film can be as simple as the number of fans; David Church raises the question of how many people it takes to form a cult following, especially now that home video makes fans difficult to count. though the benefits are not always clear. Cult film stars known for their camp can inject subtle parody or signal when films should not be taken seriously. Campy actors can also provide comic book supervillains for serious, artistic-minded films. This can draw fan acclaim and obsession more readily than subtle,
method-inspired acting. Mark Chalon Smith of the
Los Angeles Times says technical faults may be forgiven if a film makes up for them in other areas, such as camp or transgressive content. Smith states that the early films of
John Waters are amateurish and less influential than claimed, but Waters' outrageous vision cements his place in cult cinema. Films such as
Myra Breckinridge (1970) and
Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (1970) can experience critical reappraisal later, once their camp excess and avant-garde filmmaking are better accepted, and films that are initially dismissed as frivolous are often reassessed as campy.
Nostalgia According to academic Brigid Cherry,
nostalgia "is a strong element of certain kinds of cult appeal." Academic I. Q. Hunter describes cult films as "New Hollywood
in extremis" and a form of nostalgia for that period. Ernest Mathijs instead states that cult films use nostalgia as a form of resistance against progress and capitalistic ideas of a time-based economy. Mathijs and Sexton describe
Grease (1978) as a film nostalgic about an imagined past that has acquired a nostalgic cult following. Other cult films, such as
Streets of Fire (1984), create a new fictional world based on nostalgic views of the past. Cult films may also subvert nostalgia, such as
The Big Lebowski, which introduces many nostalgic elements and then reveals them as fake and hollow.
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010) is another example, containing extensive nostalgia for the music and video gaming culture of the 2000s. Author
China Miéville praises the use of satire in
Donnie Darko for its avoidance of falling into facile and comforting nostalgia, but Nathan Lee of the
New York Sun identifies the retro aesthetic and nostalgic pastiche as factors in its popularity among midnight movie crowds.
Midnight movies Author Tomas Crowder-Taraborrelli describes
midnight movies as a reaction against the political and cultural conservatism in America, Hawkins states that these films took a rather bleak point of view due to the living conditions of the artists and the economic prospects of the 1970s. Like the surrealists and dadaists, they not only satirically attacked society but also the very structure of film – a counter-cinema that deconstructs narrative and traditional processes. Modern midnight movies retain their popularity and have been strongly diverging from mainstream films shown at midnight. Mainstream cinemas, eager to disassociate themselves from negative associations and increase profits, have begun abandoning midnight screenings. Although classic midnight movies have dropped off in popularity, they still bring reliable crowds.
Art and exploitation Although seemingly at odds with each other,
art and
exploitation films are frequently treated as equal and interchangeable in cult fandom, listed alongside each other and described in similar terms: their ability to provoke a response. The most exploitative aspects of art films are thus played up and their academic recognition ignored. This flattening of culture follows the popularity of
post-structuralism, which rejects a hierarchy of artistic merit and equates exploitation and art. Academic David Andrews writes that cult softcore films are "the most masculinized, youth-oriented, populist, and openly pornographic softcore area." The sexploitation films of
Russ Meyer were among the first to abandon all hypocritical pretenses of morality and were technically proficient enough to gain a cult following. His persistent vision saw him received as an auteur worthy of academic study; director John Waters attributes this to Meyer's ability to create complicated, sexually charged films without resorting to explicit sex. "Sick films", the most disturbing and graphically transgressive films, have their own distinct cult following; these films transcend their roots in exploitation, horror, and art films. In 1960s and 1970s America, exploitation and art films shared audiences and marketing, especially in New York City's
grindhouse cinemas.
B films, which are often conflated with exploitation, are as important to cult films as exploitation. Genre films, B films that strictly adhere to genre limitations, can appeal to cult film fans: given their transgressive excesses, horror films are likely to become cult films; and authentic martial arts skills in
Hong Kong action films can drive them to become cult favorites. Romantic fairy tale
The Princess Bride (1987) failed to attract audiences in its original release, as the studio did not know how to market it. The freedom and excitement associated with cars can be an important part of drawing cult film fans to genre films, and they can signify action and danger with more ambiguity than a gun.
Ad Week writes that cult B films, when released on home video, market themselves and need only enough advertising to raise curiosity or nostalgia.
Animation Animation can provide wide open vistas for stories. The French film
Fantastic Planet (1973) explored ideas beyond the limits of traditional, live-action science fiction films.
Ralph Bakshi's career has been marked with controversy:
Fritz the Cat (1972), the first animated film to be
rated "X" by the MPAA, provoked outrage for its racial caricatures and graphic depictions of sex, and
Coonskin (1975) was decried as racist. Bakshi recalls that older animators had tired of "kid stuff" and desired edgier work, whereas younger animators hated his work for "destroying the Disney images". Eventually, his work was reassessed and cult followings, which include
Quentin Tarantino and
Robert Rodriguez, developed around several of his films.
Heavy Metal (1981) faced similar denunciations from critics. Donald Liebenson of the
Los Angeles Times cites the violence and sexual imagery as alienating critics, who did not know what to make of the film. It became a popular midnight movie and was frequently bootlegged by fans, as licensing issues kept it from being released on video for many years. Phil Hoad of
The Guardian identifies
Akira (1988) as introducing violent, adult Japanese animation (known as
anime) to the West and paving the way for later works. Anime, according to academic Brian Ruh, is not a cult genre, but the lack of individual fandoms inside
anime fandom itself lends itself to a bleeding over of cult attention and can help spread works internationally. Anime, which is frequently presented as a series (with movies either rising from existing series, or spinning off series based on the film), provides its fans with alternative fictional canons and points of view that can drive fan activity. The
Ghost in the Shell films, for example, provided Japanese fans with enough bonus material and spinoffs that it encouraged cult tendencies. Markets that did not support the sale of these materials saw less cult activity.
Nonfiction Sensationalistic documentaries called
mondo films replicate the most shocking and transgressive elements of exploitation films. They are usually modeled after "sick films" and cover similar subject matter. Though they can be interpreted as racist, Mathijs and Mendik state that they also "exhibit a liberal attitude towards the breaking of cultural taboos". Like "so bad it's good" cult films, old propaganda and government hygiene films may be enjoyed ironically by more modern audiences for the camp value of the outdated themes and outlandish claims made about perceived social threats, such as drug use. The
sponsored film Mr. B Natural became a cult hit when it was broadcast on the satirical television show
Mystery Science Theater 3000; cast member
Trace Beaulieu cited these educational shorts as his favorite to mock on the show. Mark Jancovich states that cult audiences are drawn to these films because of their "very banality or incoherence of their political positions", unlike traditional cult films, which achieve popularity through auteurist radicalism. ==Mainstream popularity==