Sunday, December 7, 2025

2014 Horror Part Eighteen

INNER DEMONS
Dir - Seth Grossman
Overall: WOOF
 
The only thing saving Inner Demons from holding the mantle as the most insultingly terrible found footage movie, (or anything movie), ever made is an agreeable premise and functional first act.  Set up as an episode of Intervention, (unofficially of course since what actual television program would ever want to be associated with something this poorly executed), it poses the question of what would happen to a drug addict if they were also possessed by a demon.  Everything is edited and presented as if it would go to air, (talking head interviews, footage of the crew getting the footage, rapid fire editing between multiple cameras, a conventional musical score, etc), which is schlocky yet fine up until the wheels fly off as if they are on fire once we start witnessing actual demonic possession episodes suffered by Lara Vosburgh's doomed teenager.  There is an official jump the shark moment when one of the dumbest dipshits in the history of cinema, (played thanklessly by Morgan McClellan), falls in love/lust with the possessed lady and recklessly neglects any and all presumed training that he received as a cameraman for a program that deals exclusively with real life drug attics.  It is one thing if we are meant to be annoyed by his asinine behavior from this moment out, but every other character on screen proceeds to take his cue and act in a frustrating, illogical, (very), stupid, and unprofessional manner until the whole thing mercilessly ends.  The blame can be laid exclusively at director Seth Grossman and screenwriter Glenn Gers' feet, who have concocted an embarrassing, botched, and cliche-ridden work of fiction that should be illegal to release.
 
WYRMWOOD
Dir - Kiah Roache-Turner
Overall: WOOF
 
While it offers a few singular tweaks to the tired zombie action movie framework that was played out to death, (pun intended), by 2014, the first feature length work from Australian filmmaker Kiah Roache-Turner is still an insufferable and wildly underwritten addition to the bloated sub-genre.  Wyrmwood, (Wyrmwood: Road of the Dead), is the type of hyper-kinetic modern day schlock-fest that tries to out bad-ass its contemporaries, featuring frantic camera work, deafening undead screams, boatloads of profanity and gore, normal pedestrians turning into indestructible action heroes, armored vehicles ala Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior, and a tongue-in-cheek tone that allows for an arbitrarily wacky mad scientist character and Leon Burchill's comic relief sidekick to Jay Gallagher's grimacing, screaming, and brooding lead.  As Gallagher's sister who shares his immune-to-the-zombie-virus blood type, Bianca Bradey gets experimented on and finds out in the third act that she can telepathically control the undead, plus zombie blood proves to be flammable and ergo as efficient as petrol for fueling motor vehicles.  Besides these quirky details though, the movie is relentlessly obnoxious and has a plot that could fit on a napkin, making a loud, grimy, trying-way-too-hard, and exhausting watch that would like to think that it is much cooler than it actually is.
 
AT THE DEVIL'S DOOR
Dir - Nicholas McCarthy
Overall: MEH
 
A frustrating effort from writer/director Nicholas McCarthy, At the Devil's Door works best when it settles into its low-key atmosphere, but nearly every other aspect of the production interferes with such refreshing mood setting.  Though it follows a linear trajectory as it switches protagonists three times, we are given flashbacks to the first woman that we meet, (Ashley Rickards), who sells her soul for no decipherable reason and invites a nefarious entity into our world that spends a number of years dilly-dallying around until it is able to either kill or infiltrate another woman without such a willing soul-selling invocation.  As one could guess then, McCarthy's script has its share of logistical problems, adhering to a type of "making it up as it goes along" formula that distracts the viewer from becoming fully immersed in what is otherwise an admirable and unsettling tone.  The performances are also a problem at times, namely Naya Rivera who seems allergic to emoting throughout the majority of her scenes, even when things like loved ones dying, spontaneous pregnancies, and demons terrorizing her interrupt her underwritten life.  McCarthy also indulges in a criminal amount of infuriating jump scares, (as all jump scares are), which is a real shame since he generally shows restraint by emphasizing still and lingering dread.  McCarthy's efforts cannot be outright dismissed, but the flaws are undeniable.

Saturday, December 6, 2025

2013 Horror Part Sixteen

DESCENT INTO DARKNESS
Dir - Rafaël Cherkaski
Overall: MEH
 
This no-budget debut from actor-turned-filmmaker Rafaël Cherkaski follows in a tradition of primitive and disturbing mockumentaries, (ala Man Bites Dog, Be My Cat: A Film for Anne, and The Last Horror Movie, to name but a few), where a demented individual is either documented or documents themselves in an increasingly unhinged plunge into deadly depravity.  Descent Into Darkness, (Sorgoi Prakov), makes a noble attempt to one-up its forebearers with some extreme nastiness in the third act that is not for the squeamish, but the majority of the film follows a curious path that does not reveal itself until past the halfway point.  It begins as an awkward comedy of sorts where Cherkaski himself embarks on a heart-shaped "European dream" project on a map, filming everything with either a handheld camera or one mounted to his head which makes him look like a goofy, grinning, foreign tourist stereotype that allows for people to be amused by his antics.  The problem is that his slow psychological breakdown is never convincing.  He starts off as a wacky yet harmless fellow enjoying the Paris nightlife and even getting laid voluntarily, only to get annoyed by a few minor instances before snapping into a homeless, vile, sadistic, and murderous madman.  It works as a found footage property since the montage editing can be explained because Cherkaski's troubled protagonist is putting it all together on the fly, but it is difficult to see a point to any of it, let alone buy into it.
 
BIG BAD WOLVES
Dir - Aharon Keshales/Navot Papushado
Overall: GOOD
 
For their second joint writer/director collaboration Big Bad Wolves, (Mi mefakhed mehaze'ev hara), Israeli filmmakers Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado concoct a nasty revenge movie that is seeping in dry black comedy, something that makes its more unflinching moments easier to stomach.  A serial killer who targets children is on the loose, prompting one of the victim's fathers and a cocksure detective to take matters into their own hands when putting all of their elaborate efforts into a lone suspect who pleads his innocence.  The plot follows a foreseeable pattern in some respects as audience members will be able to correctly deduce how much more out of hand the inherently out of hand situation will get, but Keshales and Papushado's script throws an agreeable amount of bleak curve balls into the mix.  They also keep the tone equally dire and funny, always allowing for a line of dialog or a narrative detail to creep in that keeps this far enough removed from torture porn.  It is a story where the inhuman deeds of one monster pushes others down an adjacent path disguised by virtue, the victims becoming the perpetrators.  It is not a refreshing angle to take, (we have all seen variations of the same elongated torture scene here done many times and with similar motives), but the fact that Keshales and Papushado keep the viewer in the dark just as much as the desperate, frustrated, and broken "good guys" are gives the film a necessary and disturbing layer to crank up.
 
SHARKNADO
Dir - Thunder Levin
Overall: MEH
 
The hallmark of the Asylum mockbuster production company and a film that launched an overstaying-its-welcome franchise of increased stupidity, the initial Sharknado comes surprisingly close to being a "real" B-movie.  This is in spite of how gimmicky the premise is and of course how notoriously rushed and penny-pinching the production is, a flagship entry in Aslyum's model of getting it done with D-rent actors, shooting twelve pages of script a day, working everyone nearly twenty-four hours straight, and throwing some special effects in that only look a cut or two above Birdemic: Shock and Terror.  Against all odds and as opposed to future sequels, the Twister meets Jaws tone is played straight here, everyone on screen who is just trying to maintain their SAG insurance remarkably also maintaining their dignity in the disaster scenario.  Director Thunder Levin, (presumably his real name), even manages to pull off one or two aesthetically low-rent yet almost white-knuckled set pieces, like when Ian Ziering's deadbeat dad with a heart of gold decides to detour with his family and rescue a school buss full of marooned kids and Robbie Rist from The Brady Bunch.  The character's internal drama is just there to give them something to say, enhancing the tongue-in-cheek schlock value without stopping the laughable momentum.  It is not so much a "so bad its good" movie as it is just a "eh, whatever" waste of eighty-five minutes that could have been even more idiotic and goofy, (see future installments).

Friday, December 5, 2025

2013 Horror Part Fifteen

EUROPA REPORT
Dir - Sebastián Cordero
Overall: MEH
 
This sci-fi thriller from Ecuadorian filmmaker Sebastián Cordero recalls virtually every other sci-fi thriller ever made, which is as much a detriment to it as the fact that it is also presented as a found footage mockumentary.  Neither of these elements work to Europa Report's favor, both being derivative and distracting despite the top-notch production design, refreshingly no-nonsense characters, and Cordero's masterful use of tension as it inches its way to the preordained and doomed conclusion.  In other words, it is a frustrating watch that gets a lot right, yet it also puts itself in all too familiar waters that leave little room for genre advancement.  In between increasingly sporadic talking head interview segments, we are given a barrage of recovered footage from a Jupiter moon spacecraft mission, capturing every angle of the vessel in pristine A-budgeted cameras that are edited together like a conventional horror movie, with consistent music no less.  As always, if the footage was instead presented in its bare-bones form without the added melodrama, it would be more unsettling and surprising.  Anamaria Marinca being the only astronaut who appears to be interviewed throughout ends up being a dopey twist, and it is also faulty because her commentary is ridiculously hyperbolic.  Still, the third act is well done for those who can forgive the overall issues.
 
RIGOR MORTIS
Dir - Juno Mak
Overall: GOOD
 
The first film from Hong Kong actor-turned-director Juno Mak, Rigor Mortis is a grimy, bloody, humorless, and updated homage to the Mr. Vampire series, featuring many of the same thespians in a tonally unrecognizable work that re-imagines the comedic jiangshi sub-genre.  Chin Siu-ho portrays a fictionalized version of himself, the now downtrodden actor who plans on committing suicide in a derelict apartment complex after his wife and son had left him some time earlier.  Instead, he is saved by some old school hoping vampire hunters in a blaze of slow motion, Matrix-styled CGI moves that reveal a set of vengeful twin spirits who inadvertently posses one of the tenants that has been resurrected as a jiangshi via black magic by his grieving widow.  We meet a barrage of other characters whose sagas intermingle with each other, never leaving the gray apartment setting and never allowing any slapstick hijinks into the proceedings.  It is an interesting concept to see what one of these films would look like if it was done in a completely different manner, and for the most part Mak succeeds in creating an oppressive atmosphere via a deliberately stylized approach that paints a harrowing picture of exhausted and now miserable people either facing off against or abiding supernatural evil as they come face to face with their own mortality.  The script by Mak, Philip Yung, and Jill Leung comes off more as an afterthought compared to the glossy and digitally extravagant set pieces, bordering on incoherent as it fails to establish any of the otherworldly rules that are so dire to the situation.  Still, it has enough redeeming qualities to interest any curious fans of the types of films that it is grittying up.
 
KNIGHTS OF BADASSDOM
Dir - Joe Lynch
Overall: MEH
 
Heavy metal horror comedies are inherently suicide inducing, and if one element could make them even worse, it would be throwing live action fantasy role playing into the mix.  The miraculous thing then about Knights of Badassdom is how it manages to not be the most obnoxious movie ever made, landing some of its easy layup humor with a cast that has enough charisma to forgive some overacting that should otherwise be considered criminal.  It all fits director Joe Lynch's tone, (though allegedly there is a more horror-tinged cut of the film that has yet to be released at this writing which suits Lynch's original intentions), where grown men and a handful of way-too-attractive-to-be-there-women partake of a Dungeons & Dragons version of Civil War reenactments where real otherworldly forces are haphazardly unleashed.  The specifics are not important, nor is the plausibility of such a setting where people talk in wacky renaissance fair vernacular while running into other cosplayers who pretend to engage in epic battle with each other.  Worse yet is Ryan Kwanten who graces us with two "please kill me" metal musical numbers that are the antithesis of both funny and authentic, automatically garnishing a severe warning for any viewers who cannot stomach such braindead cliches being played up to outlandish levels of schlock.  Still, it is difficult to hate Peter Dinklage eating copious amounts of mushrooms, Jimmi Simpson being his usual pompous and weasily dickbag, Summer Glau classing up the joint, and Brian Posehn popping in to correct someone's metal sub-genre grammar.

Thursday, December 4, 2025

2011 Horror Part Twelve

THE THEATRE BIZARRE
Dir - Douglas Buck/Buddy Giovinazzo/David Gregory/Karim Hussain/Tom Savini/Richard Stanley/Jeremy Kasten
Overall: MEH
 
A cheap anthology extravaganza that is as inconsistent as the lot of em, The Theatre Bizarre brings together seven filmmakers, Richard Stanley and Tom Savini being the biggest names.  This was Stanley's first foray into horror in a decade and a half, (if one is to count his mangled The Island of Dr. Moreau which he was fired from only two weeks into filming), and he opens everything here with the Lovecraft-adjacent Clark Ashton Smith adaptation "The Mother of Toads".  A schlocky Euro-throwback of sorts, it is far from memorable, but considering that it may be the best segment here, that does not bare well for what follows.  Buddy Giovinazzo's "I Love You" is half-baked, Savini's "Wet Dreams" is merely squeamish, Douglas Buck's "The Accident" does not belong here at all, (it has nothing to do with horror), Karim Hussain's "Vision Stains" has an equally awkward presentation and premise, David Gregory's "Sweets" is nauseating and pointless, and Jeremy Kasten's wrap-round segment with Udo Kier playing a sentient marionette brings nothing of interest to the table.  Though tones vary, the entire production has a soft digital sheen to it that is poorly conducive to sinister atmosphere, but fans of gross-out gore, boobs, and squishy sound effects might not find it to be a complete waste.
 
THE SELLING
Dir - Emily Lou Wilbur
Overall: MEH
 
The only film thus far from director Emily Lou Wilbur, The Selling it typical of many contemporary comedies, namely in the fact that it refuses to allow a single character to air on the side of normal.  While it is less obnoxious than many other prime examples of this faux pas, (looking in your direction Josh Ruben), it is still a mediocre melding of haunted house tropes with wacky hijinks for the mere sake of them.  The movie's screenwriter Gabriel Danni plays a sheepish real estate agent named Richard Scarry, (that is not a typo), who tries to sell an aggressively haunted abode that is inhabited by the same demon/ghost/whatever that possessed a serial killer years back, as well as said serial killer's many victims who whisper "get out" in a Sizzler voice and arbitrarily cause mischief while other times laying dormant.  Taking liberties with supernatural behavior is nothing new to the genre, so it would be unfair to pick on Danni's screenplay for that, and he does make it a point to take the piss out of many genre motifs that have long become hackneyed.  The tone never stops being ridiculous even when Danni is dealing with his cancer-ridden mother, and some of the gags are silly enough without being grating, but it still tries harder than it succeeds, regularly teetering on announce. 
 
MIDNIGHT SON
Dir - Scott Leberecht
Overall: GOOD
 
This full-length indie debut Midnight Son from writer/director Scott Leberecht is one of many vampire films that leans into the addiction angle of such a fictional ailment, something that fits well within such a low budget and intimate framework.  Zak Kilberg portrays a young man that has a "skin condition" and works the night shift, eventually running into drug dealers who score him some crimson plasma to suck down by nefarious means, as well as Maya Parish's waitress with a nose powder problem who would otherwise be an ideal person to start a romance with.  Digitally shot, most of the film is presented in handheld sobering closeups, enhancing a type of claustrophobic atmosphere that plays into the character's trapped sense of isolation, both Kilberg and Parish finding it difficult to connect with each other as much as they would like to due to their substance dependency issues.  As things inevitably escalate, some of the dramatic plot points seem forced, springing up suddenly and coming off as less convincing than the more lingering moments of Kilberg and Parish merely dealing with their day to day struggles and inability to open up to each other.  For the most part though, the film plays to its strengths and suffices as a low-key tragedy that makes it a point to take the romanticism out of blood-sucking tropes.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

2010 Horror Part Eleven

DANTE'S INFERNO: AN ANIMATED EPIC
Dir - Mike Disa/Shūkō Murase/Yasuomi Umetsu/Victor Cook/Jong-Sik Nam/Kim Sang-jin/Lee Seung-Gyu
Overall: MEH
 
A boatload of directors and a boatload of production companies join forces on the full-length adult animated adaptation of the same year's Dante's Inferno game from Visceral Game and Electronic Arts.  Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic therefor shares an identical plot with its playable counterpart, making this both a redundant watch for fans of the game yet something that should suffice for people who would rather skip out on said game.  Though it only runs for just shy of ninety minutes, (and as the title would suggest), it is epic in scope where our Knights Templar title character returns from the Crusades only to venture into the nine circles of Hell with the poet Virgil at his side in a quest to rescue his beloved Beatrice from Satan's clutches.  Each director takes on a different layer of the underworld where Dante confronts his past sins and slices up some demons and/or condemned souls in overblown gory detail.  The animation style is consistent and impressive, plus the voice over work is appropriately grandiose, (Mark Hamill even collects a paycheck as Dante's gluttonous and abusive father), but the film still overstays its welcome.  This is due to its bare bones narrative which allows for a repetitive structure that is mind-numbingly bombastic from frame one to frame last.  The finale is oddly underwhelming, but at least it all looks great and may hit the spot for those who just want some loud, violent, and non-stop netherworld action.
 
LUNOPOLIS
Dir - Matthew Avant
Overall: MEH
 
An indie mockumentary project and debut from filmmaker Matthew Avant, Lunopolis weaves an absurd tale of UFOs, time travel, government conspiracies, cults, clandestine string-pulling organizations, and 2012 prophesies, all thrown into a blender and done within a format that hardly suits the material.  As always, the use of consistent music and cinematic editing comes off as laughable at best since we are witnessing wild phenomenon caught on camera, but this is actually one of the movie's lesser problems.  The main issue is the way in which Avant puts the footage together.  Large portions go by where we are following the exploits of an aspiring team of researchers as they film everything, follow some coordinates, and uncover a mysterious contraption in a subterranean bunker, all while a talking head in a French accents interjects with some commentary.  Eventually though, this format is abandoned and we get an extended sequence that comes off as your average Ancient Aliens episode or a pseudoscience equivalent thereof, bombarding the viewer with ridiculous conspiratorial information that is legit in such a scenario.  A clumsy finish that reinforces the amateur level performances does not help matters, but despite the film's multitude of faux pases, there is a better movie lurking in here that could have been compelling instead of just awkward and goofy if it had a heftier budget and acceptable production values.
 
SENNENTUNTSCHI
Dir - Michael Steiner
Overall: MEH
 
This live-action reinterpretation of the Swiss mountain legend of the same name is a rarity in the fact that Switzerland has never delivered much in the way of horror cinema, but the results are equal parts satisfying and disappointing.  Sennentuntschi, (Sennentuntschi: Curse of the Alps), it technically told in flashback since it bookends with modern day segments, the main narrative set in the mid 1970s when a mysterious feral woman arrives in a small village and also appears to three Alpine herdsman who seem to drunkenly summon and abuse her.  Timelines eventually converge, and director/co-writer Michael Steiner utilizes James Wan-style rapid cuts in the third act, just to catch up any viewers who are missing enough brain cells concerning the mind-blowing revelations being delivered.  Sadly, these quasi-twists are more convoluted than gasp-worthy, plus the characters all range from unsympathetic, to underwritten, to inconsistent, to downright idiotic.  Roxane Mesquida turns in an admirable performances as the mute title character who is both brutalized and frightening depending on the situation or how much her suffering has warped her.  The presentation borders on schlock here or there, plus the ambitious structure renders the entire affair about twenty minutes too long, but at least it goes for something bold and heavy within its bloody folk horror playground.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

2000s American Horror Part Thirty-Eight

FREDDY VS. JASON
(2003)
Dir - Ronny Yu
Overall: MEH
 
Hot off his success with Bride of Chucky, Hong Kong director Ronny Yu breathes some more schlocky life into two additional and already schlocky horror properties with the inevitable crossover Freddy vs. Jason.  Coming after a near decade long wait each, this was the last entry into both the Friday the 13th and A Nightmare on Elm Street franchises before the immediately forgettable reboots that came a few years later, so it is triple noteworthy for being Robert Englund's final foray as Freddy Krueger.  Englund hams it up as much as he ever did in a movie that has every business being as idiotic as it is, with Canadian stuntman Ken Kirzinger stepping in for Kane Hodder since all that is ultimately required for Jason Voorhees is to just be a big dumb walking meat sack with a machete.  Several years in the making with various script treatments being done before all of the legalities could be sussed out, it does what a Freddy versus Jason movie is supposed to do.  The bar was low enough considering the multitude of "making it up as they went along, because fuck it" sequels that came before, and this one is doubly obnoxious for adhering to the early 2000s trope of deplorably stupid teenage horror romps that insult the viewer with a nod and wink.  To be fair though, Yu knows what kind of product he is tasked with making here, delivering enough nonsensical cartoon mayhem between his two slasher icons to forgive stereotypical characters who only behave the way they do because the script needs to wrap itself up at some point.
 
IN MEMORIUM
(2005)
Dir - Amanda Gusack
Overall: MEH
 
It is a common thread amongst found footage movies to be presented in a framework that begs the question of why they were done as found footage movies in the first place.  The full-length debut In Memorium from indie filmmaker Amanda Gusack is just such a movie, since it opens with our lead character installing dozens upon dozens of cameras in a suburban house that him and his girlfriend are renting for a few months, just to make sure we get boatloads of conventional coverage to edit from.  Why they are renting one instead of just chilling at their own is never convincingly explained, but that is less of a problem compared to others.  The premise involves Erik McDowell being diagnosed with terminal cancer, so he decides to document the last few months of his life so that we can get a full-length movie out of it.  McDowell and his devoted girlfriend Johanna Watts hold their own with the material, but Levi Powell as McDowell's stoner dude brother turns in a horrendous performance, something that devalues the heavy subject matter which deals with mortality, guilt, and the struggles that adults face with the sins of their parents having affected them.  Gusack at least resists adding any scary music, but she is only able to muster the type of derivative plot points and scare tactics that have been seen countless times before and since.
 
DEAD AIR
(2009)
Dir - Corbin Bernsen
Overall: MEH
 
Actor-turned-director Corbin Bernsen has popped up in a number of horror movies throughout his career, with Dead Air serving as his only venture into the genre from behind the lens.  It is also a film that can be seen as the American Pontypool, being close enough of a carbon copy to warrant comparison.  Unfortunately. this is the cheaper and schlockier counterpart to Bruce McDonald's Canadian film from the previous year, which itself had its share of problems and was done on a meager budget.  Bernsen's work here has a low-rent, digital television sheen, one that looks like a pathetic dollar bin action movie that used to pop up in droves on Redbox.  The performances are of the same caliber, even genre mainstay Bill Moseley coming off like he is only mildly over-qualified for a high school drama production.  He is the best actor here though, which does not bode well for Kenny Yakkel's heavy-handed script that utilizes post-September 11th paranoia as its driving force.  The "zombie" outbreak is caused by terrorists, and the film almost becomes interesting in its third act when one of the culprits hijacks Moseley's radio broadcast and lays out all of the expository dialog and justifications.  Yet it just as quickly divulges into preachy platitudes, all the while the Hallmark movie aesthetics undermine any sense of tension, as well as making the rabid 28 Days Later-style zombie attacks come off as clumsy at best.

Monday, December 1, 2025

2000s Foreign Horror Part Nineteen

POLTERGAY
(2006)
Dir - Éric Lavaine
Overall: MEH
 
With a title like Poltergay, one can accurately deduce what they are in for, and the resulting film delivers lightweight and low stakes silliness, yet little else.  The debut from French filmmaker Éric Lavaine has a premise that is borderline ingenious; what if a house used to be a gay disco and it is now haunted by flaming queens who accidentally blew up in it when a foam machine short circuited?  Besides the goofy behavior of said queens and stereotypes being played up on how fashionable, good at cooking, and sharp they are as dancers, the rest of the humor resolves around straight Clovis Cornillac who seems to be the only one that can see them for awhile, losing his job, his girlfriend, and his mind in the process.  While none of the gags are obnoxious and the tone never becomes offensive, there is nothing here that is laugh out loud funny either.  It works more conceptually than anything, playing it tame the whole way through without going for any wild set pieces or trying to reinvent any haunted house motifs.  Not that it needs to be a game changer though, since for most viewers, the bare-bones set up will be enough as the film writes itself from there.
 
LONG PIGS
(2007)
Dir - Chris Power/Nathan Hynes
Overall: MEH
 
A redundant mockumentary about a cannibalistic serial killer, Long Pigs is the debut from the filmmaking duo of Chris Power and Nathan Hynes, their only co-directed full-length to date.  While there have only been a small handful of such movies where a documentary crew follows around somebody who nonchalantly murders people, the topic is so specific that yet another one coming down the pike with no differentiating qualities provides a superfluous viewing experience.  This particular reworking of The Last Horror Movie, Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon, and Man Bites Dog is noticeably lacking in production values, with a few unconvincing talking heads sharing screen time with Anthony Alviano's schlubby and chatty murderer that picks off anyone that looks tasty, as well as the two indie filmmakers who are following his exploits.  While the premise is inherently faulty and ridiculous from a logical standpoint, there is a moment in the final act that causes even more plausibility problems concerning how the finished product was edited together, with a tagged-on coda that the movie-within-a-movie directors could not have possibly added on.  To be fair, the film is played for dark chuckles and knows how far-fetched it is, but it still ends up being just a grisly and unnecessary entry into a niche sub-genre that has already made the same point several times over.
 
THE LOVELY BONES
(2009)
Dir - Peter Jackson
Overall: MEH
 
Hot off the monumental success of the Lord of the Rings trilogy and the also success of his blank check King Kong remake, Peter Jackson takes on the popular Alice Sebold novel The Lovely Bones, and he does so in a fashion that these later works adhere to.  This is to say that it is a bombastic film, loaded with artificial digital effects, tonal issues, a lack of subtly, and incessant music done by Brian Eno no less.  It is also a film about a fourteen year-old girl who gets murdered and probably raped by her seemingly mild-mannered, serial killer bachelor neighbor, and there lies the problem.  Jackson's fusing of CGI whimsy and having his central protagonist/victim narrate the film from an artificial nether realm where her mood switches it to either a Candy Land heaven or an Autumn-hued hell is not an egregious concept, and it easily seems like one which Jackson would gravitate towards.  What does not work is ill-placed comic relief, (stemming from Susan Sarandon's floozy and oddly insensitive grandma), underwritten characters, and a rushed plot that fails to delve into the harrowing ordeal that families suffer through when one of their children is taken from them.  Jackson is expert enough at his craft to stage some suspenseful moments, and his cast is A-list enough to deliver commendable performances with what they have to work with, but it feels like a bloated mess that is trying to be two different movies at once and not spending enough time delving into either of them.