| Category |
Nominees |
| Worst Picture |
Striptease (Columbia/Castle Rock) |
| Barb Wire (Gramercy Pictures) |
| Ed (Universal) |
| The Island of Dr. Moreau (New Line) |
| The Stupids (New Line/Savoy) |
| Worst Actor |
Tom Arnold in Big Bully, Carpool and The Stupids as Rosco "Fang" Bigger, Franklin Laszlo and Stanley Stupid (tie) |
| Pauly Shore in Bio-Dome as Bud Macintosh (tie) |
| Keanu Reeves in Chain Reaction as Eddie Kasalivich |
| Adam Sandler in Bulletproof and Happy Gilmore as Archie Moses and Happy Gilmore |
| Sylvester Stallone in Daylight as Kit Latura |
| Worst Actress |
Demi Moore in The Juror and Striptease as Annie Laird and Erin Grant |
| Pamela Anderson in Barb Wire as Barbara "Barb Wire" Kopetski |
| Whoopi Goldberg in Bogus, Eddie and Theodore Rex as Harriet Franklin, Edwina "Eddie" Franklin and Katie Coltrane |
| Melanie Griffith in Two Much as Betty Kerner |
| Julia Roberts in Mary Reilly as Mary Reilly |
| Worst Supporting Actor |
Marlon Brando in The Island of Dr. Moreau as Dr. Moreau |
| Val Kilmer in The Ghost and the Darkness and The Island of Dr. Moreau as John Henry Patterson and Dr. Montgomery |
| Burt Reynolds in Striptease as Congressman David Dilbeck |
| Steven Seagal in Executive Decision as Lt. Col. Austin Travis |
| Quentin Tarantino in From Dusk till Dawn as Richie Gecko |
| Worst Supporting Actress |
Melanie Griffith in Mulholland Falls as Katherine Hoover |
| Faye Dunaway in The Chamber and Dunston Checks In as Lee Cayhall Bowen and Mrs. Dubrow |
| Jami Gertz in Twister as Melissa Reeves |
| Daryl Hannah in Two Much as Liz Kerner |
| Teri Hatcher in Heaven's Prisoners and 2 Days in the Valley as Claudette Rocque and Becky Foxx |
| Worst Screen Couple |
Demi Moore and Burt Reynolds in Striptease |
| Pamela Anderson's "Impressive Enhancements" in Barb Wire |
| Beavis and Butt-head in Beavis and Butt-head Do America |
| Marlon Brando and "That Darn Dwarf" (Nelson de la Rosa) in The Island of Dr. Moreau |
| Matt LeBlanc and Ed (the mechanical monkey) in Ed |
| Worst Director |
Andrew Bergman for Striptease |
| John Frankenheimer for The Island of Dr. Moreau |
| Stephen Frears for Mary Reilly |
| John Landis for The Stupids |
| Brian Levant for Jingle All the Way |
| Worst Screenplay |
Striptease, screenplay by Andrew Bergman, based on the book by Carl Hiaasen |
| Barb Wire, screenplay by Chuck Pfarrer and Ilene Chaiken, story by Chaiken, based upon the characters appearing in the Dark Horse comic |
| Ed, screenplay by David Mickey Evans, story by Ken Richards and Janus Cercone |
| The Island of Dr. Moreau, screenplay by Richard Stanley and Ron Hutchinson, based on the novel by H. G. Wells |
| The Stupids, written by Brent Forrester, based on characters created by James Marshall and Harry Allard |
| Worst New Star |
Pamela Anderson in Barb Wire as Barbara "Barb Wire" Kopetski |
| Beavis and Butt-head in Beavis and Butt-head Do America |
| Ellen DeGeneres in Mr. Wrong as Martha Alston |
| Friends cast members turned movie-star-wanna-be's (Jennifer Aniston in She's the One, Lisa Kudrow in Mother, Matt LeBlanc in Ed, and David Schwimmer in The Pallbearer) |
| The new "serious" Sharon Stone in Diabolique and Last Dance as Nicole Horner and Cindy Liggett |
| Worst Original Song |
"Pussy, Pussy, Pussy (Whose Kitty Cat Are You?)" from Striptease, written by Marvin Montgomery |
| "Welcome to Planet Boom! (a.k.a. This Boom's for You)" from Barb Wire, written by Tommy Lee |
| "Whenever There is Love (Love Theme from Daylight)" from Daylight, written by Bruce Roberts and Sam Roman |
| Worst Written Film Grossing Over $100 Million |
Twister (Warner Bros.), written by Michael Crichton & Anne-Marie Martin |
| The Hunchback of Notre Dame (Disney), animation screenplay by Tab Murphy, Irene Mecchi, Bob Tzudiker & Noni White |
| Independence Day (20th Century Fox), written by Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich |
| Mission: Impossible (Paramount), based on the television series created by Bruce Geller, story by David Koepp and Steven Zaillian, screenplay by Koepp and Robert Towne |
| A Time to Kill (Warner Bros.), screenplay by Akiva Goldsman, based on the novel by John Grisham |