HomeNews'Blonde' Wins Razzie for Worst Movie; Tom Hanks, Jared Leto Take Worst...

‘Blonde’ Wins Razzie for Worst Movie; Tom Hanks, Jared Leto Take Worst Actor Prizes

The the worst in cinema were celebrated Saturday with the announcement of the winners of the 43rd Annual Razzie Awards.

Razzies aren’t a girl’s best friend. The film, “Blonde,” Netflix’s exploitative drama about Marilyn Monroe, is the “winner” of worst movie at the 43rd annual Golden Rasberry Awards (aka the Razzies), which honors the year’s most unpleasant performances and films.

This year the awards also gave themselves a trophy for their blunder in nominating a child in the worst actress category.

In January the folks behind the Golden Raspberry Awards ended up Apologizing and removed child actor’s name Ryan Kiera Armstrong from their annual list of ominees.Armstrong had been nominated for worst actress for her performance in “Firestarter,” and there was backlash given that Armstrong was only 12 years old at the time.

Those are the selections. 

WORST PICTURE

“Blonde” (An Andrew Dominik Film / Netflix)

WORST ACTOR

Jared Leto / “Morbius”

WORST ACTRESS

Awarded to The RAZZIES for “Their 43rd Worst Actress Nominations Blunder”

RAZZIE® REDEEMER AWARD

Colin Farrell (From 2004 worst actor nominee to 2022 best actor Oscar front-runner)

WORST SUPPORTING ACTOR

Tom Hanks / “Elvis”

WORST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

Adria Arjona / “Morbius”

WORST SCREEN COMBO

Tom Hanks and his latex-laden face (and that ludicrous accent)/ “Elvis”

WORST REMAKE, RIP-OFF or SEQUEL

Disney’s “Pinocchio” (NOT del Toro’s!)

WORST DIRECTOR(S)

Machine Gun Kelly (aka Colson Baker) & Mod Sun / “Good Mourning”

WORST SCREENPLAY

“Blonde” written for the screen by Andrew Dominik

Nobuhiro Hosoki
Nobuhiro Hosokihttps://www.cinemadailyus.com
Nobuhiro Hosoki grew up watching American films since he was a kid; he decided to go to the United States thanks to seeing the artistry of Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange.” After graduating from film school, he worked as an assistant director on TV Tokyo’s program called "Morning Satellite" at the New York branch office but he didn’t give up on his interest in cinema. He became a film reporter for via Yahoo Japan News. In that role, he writes news articles, picks out headliners for Yahoo News, as well as interviewing Hollywood film directors, actors, and producers working in the domestic circuit in the USA. He also does production interviews for Japanese distributors of American films and for in-theater on-sale programs. He is now the editor-in-chief of Cinemadailyus.com while continuing his work for Japan.

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