10. Rob Lowe (1988)
Ahead of its time; a cutting-edge paradigm for the neorealist celebrity film movement, establishing the genre's penchant for emotional clarity, social righteousness and anatomical accuracy.
9. Tonya Harding (1994)
A biting satire of the American dream, gloriously stylized to plumb reservoirs of emotion from the plight of the working class.
8. Kim Kardashian (2007)
A jazzy, free-form journey of sexual awakening and rediscovery of the Rubenesque aesthetic.
7. Colin Farrell (2005)
A daringly anarchic vision that's at once delicately mannered and brashly original, with dramatic use of shadow in a classic tale of lust and duplicity set against a spectral landscape of addiction and interracial reciprocity.
6. Chyna (2004)
A rusty shiv in the kidney of bourgeois family values, bristling with resentment of the institutionalized marginalization of the androgynous population.
5. Dustin Diamond (2006)
An allegory of man’s apocalyptic search for transcendence in a superficial world, challenging the nature of traditional beauty with keen, unflinching symbolism and razor-sharp dialogue from one of cinema’s most tragic figures.
4. Verne Troyer (2008)
A poignant and spiritual portrait of lost souls in the struggle against prevailing social mores and incompatible sexual identities confined by the unforgiving nature of the time-space continuum.
3. Paris Hilton (2002)
One of Hilton’s darkest and most personal films, it’s also a penetrating study of individual and social inertia, devastatingly honest and yet timeless in its scathing repudiation of feminine politics.
2. R. Kelly (2002)
A bold dissection of female adolescent sexuality, eschewing visual orthodoxy and narrative structure in favor of moral ambiguity and an exposé of the devastating effects of the eroding American school system.
1. Pam and Tommy Lee (1998)
One of the most passionately debated films of all time; a thought-provoking meditation on the sanctity of love within a backdrop of political dynamism and infections disease.