10 Exact Moments Awesome Movie Directors Stopped Trying

9. It Was All A Dream - Oliver Stone

Yoga Hosers Kevin Smith
Universal

Much like Brian De Palma, Oliver Stone's best days as a filmmaker are literally decades behind him.

The director of sure-fire classics such as Platoon, Wall Street, Born on the Fourth of July, JFK, and Natural Born Killers hasn't made a generally well-received film since 1995's Anthony Hopkins-starring Nixon.

While some might point to Stone's career tanking irredeemably with the high-profile, big-budget failure of Alexander, there are at least moments of invention within the sloppy whole which suggest a director taking a hard swing (and yes, a miss) at the material.

After the watchable-but-mediocre trio of World Trade Center, W., and Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps, Stone confirmed he'd creatively sputtered out with his 2012 thriller Savages.

If the script's attempt to make the word "wargasms" a thing wasn't embarrassing enough, Stone underlined his own creative bankruptcy with the film's head-smackingly awful ending, in which the apparent deaths of protagonists Ophelia (Blake Lively), Ben (Aaron Taylor-Johnson), and Chon (Taylor Kitsch) are revealed to be nothing more than a dream.

And so, Stone literally rewinds the movie to give the "heroes" another go-around, this time allowing them to survive.

It's a narrative device which has been hokey since at least the '90s, and so for Stone to invoke it in a 2012 movie shows just how thoroughly he's stuck in the past.

Since then, Stone has delivered a forgettable Edward Snowden biopic and, er, been hanging out with Vladimir Putin.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.