Established in 1981, the Golden Raspberry Awards have grown from a tiny ceremony hosted in founder John JB Wilson’s living room into their own Hollywood institution. Intended as an antidote to the self-congratulation and glitz of awards season fixtures like the Oscars or the Golden Globes, the Razzies aim to single out the worst films, screenplays and performances of the preceding year, serving up an irreverent parody of Hollywood’s vanity and excess.

Sometimes, the Razzie choices aren’t too far off the mark. Few would argue against Battlefield Earth‘s 2000 win for Worst Picture, or that the impenetrably murky The Last Airbender didn’t deserve the amusingly-titled award for Worst Eye-Gouging Misuse of 3D.

There have been some really worthwhile categories on occasion, too, like Worst Movie Trends of the Year, where the nominations included ‘Longer Movies, Shorter Plots’ and ‘spoiler-filled trailers’ (’58-year-old leading men wooing 28-year-old leading ladies’ ultimately won).

But like any awards ceremony, the Razzies sometimes makes some mystifying decisions, which appear to be informed either by massive box office success or failure rather than a film’s lack of merit. Which might explain the inclusion of the following…