Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery has Dr. Evil expressing a desire for "sharks with frickin' laser beams on their heads." In the 3rd film, he actually gets them.
Machete: A Mexican day-labourer turned assassin played by Danny Trejo strapping a chaingun to the front of his motorcycle and killing enormous hordes of bad guys. (Now being made into a real film)
Thanksgiving: A knife-wielding Serial Killer dressed as a Thanksgiving pilgrim kills people in the middle of the Plymouth Thanksgiving Parade, and then decapitates people while they're having sex without the other party even realizing.
Death Proof: Serial Killer Kurt Russell cannot be killed while he is in the driver's seat of his Cool Car.
The 2nd and 3rd movies have Fish-People pirates led by Davy Jones (who, for some reason, pilots a ship called The Flying Dutchman and speaks in a Scottish accent), or as some fans call him, "Captain Cthulhu".
A sky-scraper sized, ship-smashing squid which sadly didn't make it into the 3rd film. Guess not even POTC3 has that great a capacity.
The 3rd movie is summed up as thus: A Zombie Pirate captain lord teams up with his rival Badass Normal Pirate's crew to defy proven fact that the earth is round and sail over the edge to bring said Badass Normal Pirate back from the dead (Making him a Badass Normal Zombie Pirate Captain) so that he may lead the charge against an unholy alliance between Zombie mutant pirate demons led by the Zombie mutant sea devil pirate captain and a Tea Company. And the zombie pirate monkey is in it. And a hoodoo mystic Witch Doctor Sea Goddess, and Kraken.
Plus, it's based on a theme park ride, so you can throw "robots" in there, too.
Wanna bet at least one of the extras in the 3rd movie's Singapore scenes was an undercover ninja?
Godzilla often enters this trope, especially when Mecha Godzilla or Space Godzilla are present. For example, Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla is a movie where Killer Space Monkeys try to take over the Earth using a big robot dinosaur. They are defeated by the combined forces of a big non-robot dinosaur and a giant Japanese lion-god. In the sequel, Terror of Mechagodzilla, they combine forces with a Mad Scientist who controls another dinosaur using his Beautiful Daughter, who is also a robot.
The very name "Godzilla" is the English translation of the original "Gojira," which is a portmanteau of "gorilla" and the Japanese word for whale, "kujira." So, that means that Godzilla was a Gorilla Whale, or something like that.
The third incarnation of Mechagodzilla, AKA Kiryu, is built on Godzilla's bones, thereby making it a Radioactive Robot Zombie Mutant Dinosaur.
Likewise, Mothra in the Rebirth Of Mothra films fall under this. You've got Mothra Leo, Armor Mothra, Aqua Mothra, Light-Speed Mothra, and Eternal Mothra. Oh, by the way, these are all different forms of the exact same monster.
Samurai Vampire Bikers From Hell.
Biker movies create all kinds of possibilities. Another is Psychomania!, with undead bikers. Also, Werewolves On Wheels.
By the end of Van Helsing, the title character is an Angel Werewolf Vampire-Hunter in a Badass Longcoat wielding an Automatic Crossbow whose sidekick is a Sexually Active Swearing Friar Who Designs 18th Century Anti-Vampire Hand Grenades. And it flopped at the box office!
The forgettable movie Ring of Darkness involves a zombie boy band.
The House of the Dead movie gets a swing and a miss by casting its villains as zombie pirate alchemists. And, no, these are the semi-historical sort, not the cool kind from Fullmetal Alchemist or the Atelier series. Not even as cool as The Alchemist from The Venture Bros..
Badmovies.com had this to say about The Land That Time Forgot:
In honor of Earth Day, I present you with a film that contains Germans and dinosaurs. If that does not make you want to recycle, I do not know what will.
The back of the Soldier DVD case has a review from Jay Carr that reads, "Rambo, Death Wish, and Dirty Harry in outer space."
Death Race: racecar Prison convicts in a Battle Royale (possibly with cheese) fight to the death, using heavily armored Mustangs mounted with miniguns and napalm. Oh, and there's hot minority women's prisoners brought in. And The Transporter stars.
The original had a cheesecake Nazi and Sly Stallone breaking a violin over some dude's head. That's got to help it.
Fantasy Mission Force: Nazis, Amazons, vampires (and associated other ghouls), Road Warriors and a musical number. Oh, and Jackie Chan. No, we are seriously not making this up.
The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension ... Buckaroo is a genius theoretical physicist, stunt driver, neurosurgeon, samurai, strategic defense consultant, and gunslinger. Also the front man for the hardest-rocking bar band in Jersey.
You forgot comic book hero.
The Tim Burton film Pee-wee's Big Adventure has Pee-Wee Herman meet a magician, a fortune-teller, an escaped convict, a zombie truck driver, a giant, a hobo, cowboys, and bikers - and then he ends up getting chased by water-skiers, Santa Claus, and Godzilla while interrupting the filming of a Twisted Sister music video. And then he gets a movie made about his life in which James Brolin (playing Pee-Wee) fights ninjas with Morgan Fairchild.
The film Outlander boils down to a Space Marine teaming up with Vikings to fight Aliens.
Popeye, The Movie, or at least the making of it, can be considered a Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot. Directed by Robert Altman, who directed M*A*S*H and Nashville, produced by Robert Evans, based more on the original comic strip than the animated cartoons that followed, starring Robin Williams alongside Altman alumni like Shelley Duvall, filmed in Malta, in the late 1970s/early 1980s, partly financed on a mass budget by Paramount Pictures and Disney, with Italian cinematographers, with music by Harry Nilsson and Van Dyke Parks. No wonder "directionless" was a common criticism, although one has to admire that such a concoction could be made, whatever its fate.
Club Paradise. Starring Robin Williams, Peter O'Toole, and Rick Moranis. Music by Jimmy Cliff. Directed by Harold Ramis (Ghostbusters, National Lampoon's Vacation). How did it go wrong?
Dead Snow. Nazi Zombies. In Norwegian Mountains in Winter. Ein Zwei Die.
The titular characters in Ninja Cheerleaders are not just ninjas and cheerleaders but strippers and 4.0 grade students too.
Robot Monster: a virtually-immortal robot alien gorilla single-handedly destroys Earth civilization with his bubble machine and then falls in love with a human woman.
German movie Der Goldene Nazivampir von Absam 2 ?8364;“ Das Geheimnis von Schloæ#376; Kottlitz : Exactly What It Says on the Tin. ("The Golden Nazi Vampires of Absam [a mountain town in Austria] 2 - The Secrets of Castle Kottlitz.")
Dead Alive (also known as Braindead). Father McGruder fights off zombies with his Ninja like martial arts skills after proclaiming "I kick ass for the Lord!". Soon after his ascent to Ninja Priest he becomes zombified making him now a Ninja Priest Zombie.
Kung-fu Zombie. The title itself is nearly enough to qualify. The movie also has ghosts, Nice Hats and a kung-fu vampire on fire.
Star Wars - Jedi Knights. Think about it - they're ninjas with telekinetic powers, rocket ships and Laser Blades. Anakin pilots his ships and Luke guides a photon torpedo, both using psychic powers. Darth Vader is technically a Psychic Ninja Cyborg, with a cyborg arm!
Black Sheep has carnivorous zombie were-sheep and one character who engages in bestial-paedo-incest (unless the sheep was of age in sheep-years, then it's just bestial-incest)!
Star Wars is made of this. The Star Wars universe is a galaxy where cowboys, pirates, ninjas, Nazis, robots, Samurai, wizards, knights, bounty hunters, aliens, monsters, magic the Force and other typical fantasy archetypes from all genres co-exist. This is also apparent with the characters: Han Solo is both a pirate and a gunslinger. Obi-Wan Kenobi is a samurai, a ninja, a knight and a wizard. Darth Vader is a robot, a Nazi, a samurai, a sorcerer, an asthmatic, and a black knight (This is lampshaded in Night at the Museum 2. Yoda is a wizard, an alien and an old master. You could build a Star Wars character completely by mixing and matching two or three archetypes and give your creation a funny name.
In the horror movie Elves, the villain's plan to Take Over the World involves the breeding of a race of Nazi elves.
In the anthology flick The Monster Club, Mr. Exposition shows another character a schematic that shows what you get when vampires, werewolves, and/or ghouls crossbreed.
Most of the Syfy Channel Original movies are this. Take Mega Sharkvs Giant Octopus for example, it's a movie about a [[Megalodon]] big enough to snap a battle ship in half in one bite that can jump high enough to eat a jet liner about to fight a Giant Octopus big enough to crush an oil rig and levels Tokyo, the two of which have been frozen for eons.
D.E.B.S. is about a school of school-girl outfit wearing secret agents who's top student is a budding lesbian who falls for the worlds most notorious criminal.
Dude, Where's My Car?? is about two stoners who have a madcap adventure involving aliens, religious cultists, jocks, a transsexual stripper, and llamas - er, ostriches. Oh, and somewhere along the way they learn to speak Japanese.
Mulholland Drive could be seen this way. Two lesbians, one amnesiac and the other a possibly coked-out and psychotic starlet, team up to solve the mystery of the amnesiac's identity. The starlet's inability to catch a break in Hollywood is attributed to Mafiosos who are controlled by a midget and a cowboy. Oh, and outside of dream-world, the lesbians just might be a call girl and her madame.
Alien: The Facehugger is a Severed Hand Vagina Scorpion Rapist. And all the more Squicktacular for it.