Every now and then, rather than outright failing, a film fails so spectacularly and so dramatically that it wraps all the way around the rating scale and becomes good. Since the days of Ed Wood and the likes of the immortal Plan 9 From Outer Space all the way to audiences throwing spoons at screenings of Tommy Wiseau's The Room, viewers have turned these kitschy failures into cult classics complete with their own fan base, celebrations, and oral histories. And while the bulk of true so bad it's good classics came out much earlier, the new millennium presented a unique opportunity for the corner of society that appreciated cringe and ambition.