The first Twilight movie is a mash up of great cinematography choices and B-movie level plot and acting. As far as major movies go they had a limited budget and a bunch of unknown talent (at the time), and I think the lack of funding and clout helped it rather than hindered it. There's a lot of suspense and angst in some of the framing and lighting choices that is dropped in later films and it's an absolute detriment. A lot of the stylistic choices in the first movie were done to convey Bella's feelings about what was happening around her, and it's subtle, but it makes the experience more lush.
The first Resident Evil movie will always have my heart. I always got a kick out of the Alice in Wonderland references (though it's the Queen of Hearts and not the Red Queen that says "off with her head"--yes I will be that pedantic). At that time I loved Jovovich in anything she was cast in and just wanted her to be my wife. During my first viewing there was enough mystery that everything genuinely felt like a surprise, and it was sufficiently claustrophobic. For me, it didn't age well for anything but nostalgia, but I watch it at least once a year, so there really is no mystery or suspense left.
I will watch Mario Brothers over and over and over and over and it gets better every time, lol. The editing mess ups make it feel like there was a larger story, or maybe a story line panned out differently until choices in post-production, and that it was whittled down to what we see, and that's strangely compelling. I found Bob Hoskins and John Leguizamo's performances to be endearing, and I thought Dennis Hopper was both charismatic and sleazy enough to be dislikable in a good way. The conflicting tones don't bother me and I think it feels like a precursor to John Dies at the End.
Street Fighter. Raul Julia's delivery of "For you, the day Bison graced your village was the most important day of your life. But for me, it was Tuesday" blew my mind as a kid. I had never encountered anything like that scene before. I was used to Ninja Turtles fighting with Shredder, etc. Having a villain that just didn't give a damn about the protagonist's grudge seemed impossible.
Hardcore Henry has like a 50% Rotten Tomato rating so I guess it's technically a bad movie, but I found it super enjoyable. The effects (at the time, I need to rewatch it) were really well done. The one-shot effect felt organic rather than exhausting. I remember laughing a lot and just having a blast overall.