Lindsay Lohan crowned 2007's worst actress
While 300 secures best movie title
Ensure Ease of Recovery with Asigra’s Agentless Software
Lindsay Lohan has been crowned 2007's worst actress for her chilling performance in I Know Who Killed Me by a discerning audience of almost four million AOL Moviefone pollees.
Eddie Murphy also took a critical shoeing for Norbit, which was honoured as the year's worst film. 300, meanwhile, pipped Transformers into second spot in the "What movie was most worth your $10?" category.
American Gangster took third place in fans' affections, followed by Knocked Up and Ratatouille, while The Bourne Ultimatum deservedly walked off with the best movie sequel trophy.
Looking foward to 2008, moviegoers rated Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of Crystal Skull as the project they're most excited about. ®
COMMENTS
Lindsey Lohan
She was allright in Herbie Fully Loaded. I would anyway.
@Christopher
I watched Transformers when I was very, very young, and I had a small VW beetle Bumblebee, and thought I was going mad, old and senile when I saw a Camaro turning into Bumblebee.
So, thanks to explaining that... now I can sleep peacefully again...
@Christopher Aussant
hahahahaa. The "Transformers fans" you speak of are sad geeks-boys. No one normal gets pissed off because of percieved Transformers continuity blunders!
Their target market was pretty clear - my generation, who watched the original transformers TV stuff and maybe the film and then grew up and filled their heads with other more marketable / exciting-for-those-over-12 stuff, or the new generation of kids that haven't really been introduced to the Transformers franchise.
What you don't seem to realise is that people that people who remember children's TV shows in such detail don't make up a large enough group to have any significant purchasing power at all...

What you need to know about cloud backup
Agentless Backup is Not a Myth
Steps to Take Before Choosing a Business Continuity Partner
Ensure Ease of Recovery with Asigra’s Agentless Software
SaaS data loss: The problem you didn’t know you had