37th Golden Raspberry Awards
The 37th Golden Raspberry Awards, an annual satirical ceremony mocking the poorest achievements in filmmaking, were held on February 25, 2017, to recognize the worst motion pictures released during 2016.[1] The event awarded Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party, a partisan documentary directed by Dinesh D'Souza critical of the Democratic Party's historical record, the Worst Picture category along with Worst Actress for Rebekah Turner, Worst Screen Combo, and Worst Director, marking a rare victory for a non-fiction work typically dominated by studio blockbusters.[2][3][1] Meanwhile, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice secured four awards, including Worst Screenplay, Worst Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel, Worst Supporting Actor for Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, and Worst Supporting Actress for Amy Adams as Lois Lane, reflecting voter disdain for its convoluted narrative and character portrayals despite its substantial box office earnings exceeding $870 million worldwide.[1][4] Nominations, unveiled on January 23, 2017, saw Batman v Superman topping the list with 11, underscoring the ceremony's focus on high-profile disappointments, while the inclusion of Hillary's America—a low-budget film that grossed $13 million—highlighted voter emphasis on perceived ideological excess over production flaws.[1][3] In a positive departure, Mel Gibson earned the Razzie Redeemer Award for directing Hacksaw Ridge, acknowledging his return to critical favor following prior Razzie-nominated work.[5]Event Background
Date, Venue, and Format
The 37th Golden Raspberry Awards took place on February 25, 2017, in Los Angeles, California, deliberately scheduled the day before the Academy Awards to parody the Oscars as a counter-event highlighting cinematic shortcomings.[1][6] The ceremony followed the awards' characteristic low-budget, satirical format, eschewing a live audience, red carpet, or formal venue in favor of a pre-recorded video announcement of results, typically delivered by founder John Wilson to underscore the event's mocking intent toward Hollywood excesses.[7][5] This edition marked the first implementation of expanded nomination fields, increasing from five to six nominees per category in the core awards, a rule change by the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation aimed at accommodating a larger volume of perceived film failures from the prior year.[8][9]Host and Presentation Style
The 37th Golden Raspberry Awards eschewed a traditional live ceremony or celebrity host, opting instead for a pre-recorded video announcement uploaded to the official Razzie YouTube channel on February 25, 2017, to preserve the event's emphasis on unadorned mockery over Hollywood pomp.[5] This format, narrated with deadpan sarcasm by Razzie representatives, incorporated film clips and voiceover commentary to lampoon specific artistic shortcomings, such as contrived narratives and wooden deliveries, without the distraction of red-carpet glamour.[3] The presentation style reinforced the awards' parodic intent through deliberate low production values, including "trophies" fashioned from inexpensive, spray-painted Super Shopper statuettes—a staple since the event's inception—to signify disdain for excess rather than celebrate it. Pre-announcement of results the day before the Academy Awards amplified the critique's timeliness, positioning the Razzies as a blunt counterpoint that privileges objective ridicule of evident deficiencies over subjective acclaim.[10] This approach, consistent with founder John J.B. Wilson's vision of humorously exposing cinematic mediocrity, avoided softening the satire with performer banter or elaborate staging.[11]Nomination Process
Announcement and Voting Mechanics
The nominations for the 37th Golden Raspberry Awards were announced on January 23, 2017, based on votes cast by members of the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation.[12][13] Pre-nomination ballots, intended to generate shortlists of potential candidates, were distributed to voting members during the week of January 2, 2017.[14] The process relied on online voting through platforms like Election Runner, where members selected from 7 to 12 pre-listed contenders per category, supplemented by write-in options, to determine the final slate of typically five nominees each.[15] Eligibility was restricted to feature-length films that received wide theatrical releases in the United States during the 2016 calendar year, aligning with the awards' annual focus on the prior year's cinematic output.[16] Voting membership, open to the public upon payment of a fee, comprised over 1,000 individuals across all 50 U.S. states and multiple countries, enabling broad participation in identifying perceived artistic and technical shortcomings such as plot inconsistencies or subpar performances.[12][17] This membership-driven mechanism, overseen by founder John Wilson, emphasized collective judgment over institutional critiques, though selections have occasionally included politically charged films, underscoring the process's independence from mainstream media consensus.Leading Nominees by Film
Zoolander 2 received the highest number of nominations with nine, spanning categories such as Worst Picture, Worst Actor (Ben Stiller), Worst Director (Ben Stiller), and Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-off or Sequel.[18][8] Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice earned eight nominations, including for Worst Picture, Worst Actor (Ben Affleck and Henry Cavill), Worst Director (Zack Snyder), and Worst Screenplay.[18][8] The following films each secured four nominations:| Film | Nominations |
|---|---|
| Dirty Grandpa | 4 |
| Gods of Egypt | 4 |
| Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party | 4 |
| Independence Day: Resurgence | 4 |
Awards Categories
Core Razzie Categories
The core categories of the 37th Golden Raspberry Awards encompassed Worst Picture, Worst Director, Worst Actor, Worst Actress, Worst Supporting Actor, Worst Supporting Actress, Worst Screenplay, Worst Screen Combo, and Worst Remake, Rip-off or Sequel, each targeting discrete elements of film production prone to objective deficiencies.[8][19] These satirical distinctions parody the Academy Awards by spotlighting verifiable lapses, such as structural flaws in storytelling or mismatched performer roles, where accountability rests on the filmmakers' execution rather than extraneous variables like scheduling pressures or financial limitations.[10][20] In this edition, the organizers increased nominees per category to six, enabling a wider sampling of empirical underperformances across recent releases and underscoring patterns of avoidable errors in creative decision-making.[20] This adjustment facilitated deeper scrutiny of causal factors, including directorial oversight in maintaining plot coherence or casting selections that undermined character authenticity, without deference to subjective defenses rooted in artistic intent.[10] The framework thus prioritized dissecting tangible outputs—measured by audience disengagement metrics and critical consensus on execution flaws—over nominal excuses tied to input constraints.[19]Special Awards like Razzie Redeemer
The Razzie Redeemer Award, established to honor performers who rebound from prior Razzie nominations or wins through subsequent critically successful work, was awarded at the 37th Golden Raspberry Awards to Mel Gibson for directing Hacksaw Ridge (2016).[21][22] Gibson, nominated for Worst Supporting Actor for The Expendables 3 (2014) among other past Razzie recognitions spanning his career, directed the biographical war film about Desmond Doss, which earned widespread acclaim for its portrayal of heroism and technical achievements, including two Academy Awards for Film Editing and Sound Mixing.[23][24] This sole special award in the 37th ceremony highlighted a rare pivot from the Razzies' traditional focus on mockery toward recognizing verifiable career resurgence, evidenced by Hacksaw Ridge's $180.4 million worldwide box office on a $40 million budget and 84% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 318 reviews.[25] The film's success contrasted Gibson's earlier Razzie-associated projects, demonstrating sustained audience and critical engagement post-controversies, with domestic earnings of $67.2 million underscoring commercial viability.[26] No additional Redeemer or comparable non-punitive categories were presented, emphasizing the award's exceptional status for genuine artistic recovery in this edition.[21]Winners and Results
Worst Picture and Major Category Outcomes
The 37th Golden Raspberry Awards, presented on February 25, 2017, named Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party as Worst Picture, directed by Dinesh D'Souza and Bruce Schooley.[1] This documentary, released in 2016, became the first non-fiction film to win the category, noted for its partisan critique of the Democratic Party's history that drew accusations of selective facts and dramatized impersonations.[3] Despite a production budget under $5 million, it earned $13 million at the North American box office, reflecting strong appeal among conservative audiences amid the 2016 U.S. presidential election.[4] Dinesh D'Souza received Worst Actor for his portrayal of Hillary Clinton in the film, with the award emphasizing flaws in the impersonation's execution rather than broader acting credentials.[2] The film secured three additional Razzies, tying with Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice for the most wins at four each.[1] Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice dominated other major categories, winning Worst Screenplay for Chris Terrio and David S. Goyer; Worst Supporting Actor for Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor; Worst Remake, Rip-off or Sequel; and Worst Screen Combo for Ben Affleck and Henry Cavill as Batman and Superman, respectively.[3] These outcomes highlighted perceived narrative incoherence and character portrayals in the superhero blockbuster, which had opened to $166 million domestically but faced divided audience reactions.[27]Films with Multiple Wins
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party each earned four Razzie Awards at the 37th ceremony, comprising eight of the nine competitive categories and exemplifying the event's emphasis on films viewed as profound creative or ideological misfires.[3][1]| Film | Number of Wins |
|---|---|
| Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice | 4[3] |
| Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party | 4[1] |
Film Analysis
Box Office and Critical Reception of Key Nominees
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice earned $873.6 million worldwide against a production budget of $250 million plus $150 million in marketing costs, marking a financial success driven by franchise appeal and international markets, even as it received a 28% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 436 critic reviews, reflecting widespread criticism of its pacing, character development, and visual effects execution.[29] This disparity underscores how audience turnout for superhero spectacles can outpace critical consensus on narrative coherence and tonal inconsistencies. In contrast, Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party, a documentary with a modest $1.5 million budget, generated $13.1 million in U.S. box office revenue, yielding substantial returns through targeted conservative audiences and limited theatrical runs, despite a 4% Rotten Tomatoes score based on 27 reviews that highlighted factual distortions and propagandistic framing over evidentiary rigor.[30][31] Its profitability illustrates how ideological alignment can sustain commercial viability absent broad critical validation, prioritizing persuasive rhetoric over balanced historical analysis. Gods of Egypt underperformed relative to expectations, grossing $163.4 million worldwide on a $140 million budget—resulting in losses after marketing—while earning a 15% Rotten Tomatoes rating from 193 reviews that lambasted its whitewashed casting, derivative mythology, and subpar CGI despite modest visual ambition.[32] This case exemplifies causal shortcomings in production choices, such as prioritizing spectacle over authentic storytelling, which undermined both artistic merit and financial recovery.| Film | Worldwide Gross | Budget | Rotten Tomatoes Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice | $873.6M | $250M | 28% |
| Hillary's America | $13.1M (U.S.) | $1.5M | 4% |
| Gods of Egypt | $163.4M | $140M | 15% |
Multiple Nominations Breakdown
Zoolander 2 received the highest number of nominations with nine, including categories such as Worst Picture, Worst Actor for Ben Stiller, Worst Actress for Kristen Wiig, Worst Director for Stiller, Worst Screenplay, Worst Prequel/Remake/Rip-off/Sequel, Worst Screen Combo for Stiller and Wiig, and Worst Supporting Actress for Penelope Cruz.[8][12] Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice followed closely with eight nominations, encompassing Worst Picture, Worst Actor for Ben Affleck, Worst Supporting Actor for Jesse Eisenberg, Worst Supporting Actress for Amy Adams and Lauren Cohan (tied), Worst Director for Zack Snyder, Worst Screenplay, and Worst Screen Combo for Affleck and Henry Cavill.[8][18] Multiple nominations in acting categories highlighted performances as a recurrent target, with Dirty Grandpa earning two Worst Actor nods for Robert De Niro and Zac Efron, alongside nominations for Worst Picture, Worst Supporting Actor for Aubrey Plaza, and Worst Screen Combo for De Niro and Efron.[8][34] Nominations for Worst Remake, Rip-off or Sequel were dominated by follow-ups like Zoolander 2 and Independence Day: Resurgence, reflecting voter emphasis on unoriginality in franchise extensions that failed to deliver fresh narratives or quality comparable to originals.[8][19] The distribution extended across genres, with the conservative documentary Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party nominated for Worst Picture and Worst Actor for Dinesh D'Souza, alongside mainstream blockbusters and comedies, indicating selections based on perceived artistic shortcomings rather than uniform ideological exclusion.[8][34]| Film | Number of Nominations |
|---|---|
| Zoolander 2 | 9 |
| Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice | 8 |
| Dirty Grandpa | 5 |
| Gods of Egypt | 4 |
| Independence Day: Resurgence | 3 |
| Hillary's America | 2 |