Hated, dogged, scandalous, sordid, nasty—these movies have been called all of those things, and much worse. Many have inspired death threats and physical attacks, while others have engendered heated wars of words that have lasted decades.
For some of these movies, the controversy has been helpful—hey say that any publicity is good publicity, after all. But that’s not always true. Sometimes canny filmmakers and distributors can turn scandal around, but an uproar is just as likely to bury a movie. That’s why while many of the most controversial movies ever are familiar now-classics, others you might never have heard of.
It’s easy to look at some of them and think “good, it deserved to be buried.” but that’s the thing about controversy: If we all agreed, there’d be nothing to talk about. In a modern cinematic marketplace structured around global blockbusters designed to appeal to everyone equally, it’s not a bad thing to remember that we’re still capable of being shocked and appalled, even if we aren’t all shocked or appalled by the same things. Even deeply problematic movies can help us to refine and redefine our own morals, and challenge us when we love a piece of art but hate the artist. Time has dulled the outrage surrounding many of these films while, in a few cases, modern sensibilities have raised alarms that have been blaring for decades, if only more were listening. In short, and in almost every case: it’s complicated.