One critic referred to Trail of the Pink Panther as "cinematic graverobbing at its most unsavoury", due to the fact that it was released more than 2 years after Peter Sellers' death, and simply re-used deleted and cutting room footage from throughout the actor's career, even if it didn't make any sense at all. It feels like a surreal Dali experiment; Sellers' age changes drastically without rhyme or reason, and the time chasm between the various films means that characters never stick to a specific time era regarding cars and clothing codes. They did film some new footage, too; an excursion in which Inspector Clouseau finds himself on a plane features a double who has his face wrapped up in bandages, though the film makes little attempt to really disguise him, given that it frequently features close-ups of a man who is decidedly not Peter Sellers. Finally fed up with the ruse, Clouseau dies half-way through the film, and the rest of it is just a greatest hits clip show. Sellers' wife sued the production for tarnishing his legacy and won $1m in damages, while the film went on to be critically savaged as a crass money-making spectacle. Which movie production do you find the most sickening, or perhaps the most genius? Let us know in the comments below.