Centuries from now, scholars will point to Sharknado as one of the most important cultural relics of 21st century America. Or not. But who cares? Sharknado is hilariously bad, and marks the shark-jumping pinnacle in a series of creature-feature B-movies produced by Syfy, a network known for extremely low budgets and what seems to be intentionally bad direction of phoned-in performances by has-been celebrities. Essentially, it's a shoe-in for Camera 3's new monthly series on bad cult films, "B-Movie Bombs." A ticket buys you admission to the film along with an index card of low-budget genre film tropes. The audience is encouraged to laugh, snicker and make sarcastic asides.
Centuries from now, scholars will point to Sharknado as one of the most important cultural relics of 21st century America. Or not. But who cares? Sharknado is hilariously bad, and marks the shark-jumping pinnacle in a series of creature-feature B-movies produced by Syfy, a network known for extremely low budgets and what seems to be intentionally bad direction of phoned-in performances by has-been celebrities. Essentially, it's a shoe-in for Camera 3's new monthly series on bad cult films, "B-Movie Bombs." A ticket buys you admission to the film along with an index card of low-budget genre film tropes. The audience is encouraged to laugh, snicker and make sarcastic asides.
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