This part is where the movie really comes alive, if even for a moment. The iconic theme kicks in and Superman starts it easy by tearing off the unmanned space shuttle and throwing it into space, where it won’t harm anyone. Then things get hairy. Superman’s in no physical peril here, but those people on the plane – which includes Lois Lane bouncing around like a pinball – are doomed. His strength doesn’t give him the easy win here, as pulling on a wing only tears it apart. He uses more care to save all those people and does so in the middle of a baseball field, surrounded by cheering fans. Then Superman enters the plane and greets everyone with cheesy rhetoric about how airliners are still the safest way to travel.

9. Avengers vs. the Hulk Ultimate Avengers (2006)

The direct-to-video animated movies Marvel used to put out weren’t very good. They were 95% dull on the whole and only really became worth checking out when they did the Hulk Versus features. Even before that, Hulk was making the animated Avengers movies watchable, whether he was busting up Ultron in the future or clashing with the Avengers in the present.

Ultimate Avengers is a loose adaptation of Mark Millar and Bryan Hitch’s Ultimates and one of the big differences (outside of Thor’s lack of beard) is the ordering of threats. In the comic, the Ultimates fight the Hulk and later use him as an attack dog against the alien invasion. In this movie, they instead fight the aliens first and then Hulk gets a little too rowdy in the face of victory. That’s when things get fun. Hulk proceeds to take on all of the Avengers, giving us such awesome moments as Hulk brutally haymakering the side of Giant Man’s kneecap and Cap straight up running up to Hulk and punching him in the face, despite being thrown around like a ragdoll thrice over.

Even though the Hulk fight is everyone’s favorite part of the movie, they somehow decided that Hulk needed a whopping twenty seconds of screentime in the sequel. Go figure.

8. Oh No! Country Bear Hall has Been Crushed!

The Country Bears (2002)

Country Bears is a movie I watched with great reluctance. My friend got it for me for Christmas as a gag and after a long, long time of begging off, I finally decided to give it a watch and get it over with. It’s just as bad as you think. Think of the Muppets, right down to the same storyline, only without the charm. That is, unless you’re talking about the movie’s villain Reed Thimple, as played by Christopher Walken’s hankering for a paycheck. Walken makes any scene he’s in, but there’s one that really takes the cake.