Category
|
Nominees
|
Worst Picture
|
Striptease (
Columbia/
Castle Rock)
|
Barb Wire (
Gramercy Pictures)
|
Ed (
Universal)
|
The Island of Dr. Moreau (
New Line)
|
The Stupids (
New Line/
Savoy)
|
Worst Actor
|
Tom Arnold in
Big Bully,
Carpool and
The Stupids as Rosco "Fang" Bigger, Franklin Laszlo and Stanley Stupid (respectively) (tie)
|
Pauly Shore in
Bio-Dome as Bud Macintosh (tie)
|
Keanu Reeves in
Chain Reaction as Eddie Kasalivich
|
Adam Sandler in
Bulletproof and
Happy Gilmore as Archie Moses and Happy Gilmore
|
Sylvester Stallone in
Daylight as Kit Latura
|
Worst Actress
|
Demi Moore in
The Juror and
Striptease as Annie Laird and Erin Grant (respectively)
|
Pamela Anderson in
Barb Wire as
Barbara "Barb Wire" Kopetski
|
Whoopi Goldberg in
Bogus,
Eddie and
Theodore Rex as Harriet Franklin, Edwina "Eddie" Franklin and Katie Coltrane (respectively)
|
Melanie Griffith in
Two Much as Betty Kerner
|
Julia Roberts in
Mary Reilly as Mary Reilly
|
Worst Supporting Actor
|
Marlon Brando in
The Island of Dr. Moreau as Dr. Moreau
|
Val Kilmer in
The Ghost and the Darkness and The Island of Dr. Moreau as
John Henry Patterson and Dr. Montgomery (respectively)
|
Burt Reynolds in
Striptease as Congressman David Dilbeck
|
Steven Seagal in
Executive Decision as Lt. Col. Austin Travis
|
Quentin Tarantino in
From Dusk till Dawn as Richie Gecko
|
Worst Supporting Actress
|
Melanie Griffith in
Mulholland Falls as Katherine Hoover
|
Faye Dunaway in
The Chamber and
Dunston Checks In as Lee Cayhall Bowen and Mrs. Elena Dubrow (respectively)
|
Jami Gertz in
Twister as Melissa Reeves
|
Daryl Hannah in
Two Much as Liz Kerner
|
Teri Hatcher in
Heaven's Prisoners and
2 Days in the Valley as Claudette Rocque and Becky Foxx (respectively)
|
Worst Screen Couple
|
Demi Moore and
Burt Reynolds in
Striptease
|
Pamela Anderson's "Impressive Enhancements" in
Barb Wire
|
Beavis and Butt-head in
Beavis and Butt-head Do America
|
Marlon Brando and "That Darn Dwarf" (
Nelson de la Rosa) in
The Island of Dr. Moreau
|
Matt LeBlanc and Ed (the mechanical monkey) in
Ed
|
Worst Director
|
Andrew Bergman for
Striptease
|
John Frankenheimer for
The Island of Dr. Moreau
|
Stephen Frears for
Mary Reilly
|
John Landis for
The Stupids
|
Brian Levant for
Jingle All the Way
|
Worst Screenplay
|
Striptease, screenplay by
Andrew Bergman, based on the
novel by
Carl Hiaasen
|
Barb Wire, screenplay by
Chuck Pfarrer and
Ilene Chaiken, story by Chaiken, based upon the characters appearing in the
Dark Horse comic
|
Ed, screenplay by
David Mickey Evans, story by
Ken Richards and
Janus Cercone
|
The Island of Dr. Moreau, screenplay by
Richard Stanley and
Ron Hutchinson, based on the
novel by
H. G. Wells
|
The Stupids, written by
Brent Forrester, based on characters created by
James Marshall and
Harry Allard
|
Worst New Star
|
Pamela Anderson in
Barb Wire as
Barbara "Barb Wire" Kopetski
|
Beavis and
Butt-Head in
Beavis and Butt-Head Do America
|
Ellen DeGeneres in
Mr. Wrong as Martha Alston
|
Friends cast members turned movie-star-wanna-be's (
Jennifer Aniston in
She's the One,
Lisa Kudrow in
Mother,
Matt LeBlanc in
Ed, and
David Schwimmer in
The Pallbearer)
|
The new "serious"
Sharon Stone in
Diabolique and
Last Dance as Nicole Horner and Cindy Liggett (respectively)
|
Worst Original Song
|
"Pussy, Pussy, Pussy (Whose Kitty Cat Are You?)" from
Striptease, written by Marvin Montgomery
|
"Welcome to Planet Boom! (a.k.a. This Boom's for You)" from
Barb Wire, written by
Tommy Lee
|
"
Whenever There is Love (Love Theme from Daylight)" from
Daylight, written by
Bruce Roberts and
Sam Roman
|
Worst Written Film Grossing Over $100 Million
|
Twister (
Warner Bros.), written by
Michael Crichton &
Anne-Marie Martin
|
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (
Disney), animation screenplay by
Tab Murphy,
Irene Mecchi,
Bob Tzudiker &
Noni White
|
Independence Day (
20th Century Fox), written by
Dean Devlin and
Roland Emmerich
|
Mission: Impossible (
Paramount), based on the
television series created by
Bruce Geller, story by
David Koepp and
Steven Zaillian, screenplay by Koepp and
Robert Towne
|
A Time to Kill (
Warner Bros.), screenplay by
Akiva Goldsman, based on the novel by
John Grisham
|