The Hunger (1983)
Hmm ... this is a tough movie to rate. The rules for how vampirism works in this film's universe aren't that well defined, so as a result the film suffers storywise, especially towards the end of the film. On the other hand, the cinematography is breathtakingly beautiful -- it raises the picture above the material it has to work with considerably. Also, David Bowie.
A
I Am Stamos (2004)
I originally saw this back around -- oh -- 2005 or so. Back then I found it incredibly funny. Nowadays, though? Not so much.
I enjoyed Clint Howard's cameo, though.
C
Felicia's Journey (1999)
Another movie I find hard to rate, especially seeing as I fell asleep in the last half hour of the film or so and missed everything right before the ending. I guess I'll just say that while the pacing is a little too slow, Bob Hoskins and Elaine Cassidy both give decent-to-great performances (especially Hoskins).
C+/B-
No Country for Old Men (2007)
I don't get the hype for this movie, not in the least. Whatever everyone else is seeing in this film, I'm not seeing it at all.
C
Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine (1965)
I admit I loved this movie. Of course, that's probably due to Vincent Price's presence more than anything else in the film.
B
Naked Lunch (1991)
Initially captivating, but the spectacle of seeing typewriters turn into giant bugs with talking assholes quickly loses its appeal and the film becomes dreary and rather unpleasant, especially in the scene towards the end where the arthropomorphic Julian Sands sodomizes the dummy of that Canadian actor whose name I can never recall. Methinks the entire movie would have worked better as a short film.
On the plus side, the animatronic effects were awesome and that chick from Barton Fink is nice to look at (even if she is a bug powder junkie).
B-