Archive for American Horror

The Sentinel (1977) (watched 6/15/14)

Posted in 4 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 06/17/2014 by schlockfest

Looking for an engaging 70s flick that may have flown under the radar? Look no further, but be warned: The Sentinel is no schlocky bloodbath. It’s a genuine buildup, skincrawler that will having you checking for your Baptism records. It’s no party flick though. There’s too much nuance, which would be lost in side conversations, and the performances/plot are a blast for any half serious cinephile.

Allllisssssoooonnn.....

Allllisssssoooonnn…..

Director Michael Winner came blasting out of the oppressive fog of the Hays Code with Charles Bronson. He cements his commitment to the edgy, boundary pushing vision he should be remembered for with The Sentinel. Priests at the pulpit had to brimming with damnation for anyone in the pews who went to see it, and teenagers everywhere had a brand new morality tale to guide the decisions of their youth (can’t spoil it here). Suffice to say, The Sentinel has moments that make you feel awkward and a few that might even keep you up at night pondering. Some would argue it has one of the top five jump scares of all time.

It’s based (verbatim) on a novel of the same name from 1974 (one year after The Exorcist was released). I found it in a dollar bin of my local Top’s grocery store and blew through it in few days. It was creepy. I couldn’t imagine the film topping it, but Christina Raines brings Allison to life beautifully, and the events that unfold in and around her apartment manage to leave you curious and revolted. And if that’s not enough Christopher Walken manages to drop a few lines. Skip the book, watch the movie (first time I’ve ever said, honestly.)

Whereas The Exorcist is a good vs evil struggle for power, The Sentinel is more of a conspiratorial, darker side of repenting. It struck me as creepy and more personal. The interconnected nature of good and evil in this film don’t battle. Rather, they create a symbiotic union that forges fodder for the other, and which seems to have endless implications. Personally, I’d pick this one over The Exorcist, but it’s certainly worth the watch so you can make your own decisions…

Goodnight Moon.

Goodnight Moon.

4/5 shaking chandeliers

What it has: models, crucifixes, confessions, cat and a canary, daguerreotypes, cryptic latin passages, zombies, hallucinations, affairs, cheap New York apartments, a blind priest, a birthday party for a cat, and masturbation

What it’s missing: a seal of approval from the Catholic church, rodents, and a higher rating on IMDB

 

Level 7 (watched 6/16/14)

Posted in 1 Brain, Should've been 45 minutes with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 06/17/2014 by schlockfest

If it weren’t already difficult enough to be my friend, I make some poor schlocker choose a movie from a pile of “films” I’ve pre-selected, that way they can take the fall when things turn out like they did tonight. The only thing worse than the movie tonight was that Pat had to take the fall for selecting it (He’s pretty much the nicest one among us). Crissy passed on it two weeks ago, Luke saw a brighter future in Happy Birthday to Me, but Pat was brave enough to stand in front of the projector tonight and say ” I choose this one. I choose the mutated zombie people from North Carolina, and here’s your awesome spicy pineapple tequila drink.”

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Just talking about life during the apocalypse, again.

I need to preface this review by saying not only are we extremely supportive of independent cinema (I mean some of my closest friends make films), but we have a BIG appreciation for what it takes to make a movie, even a crappy one. But if you’re reading this, and thinking about making a film, here’s the biggest piece of advice I can give: Less is more. Level 7 is a whopping 110 minutes long and about 70 minutes too long at that. We spent a lot of the film wondering why we had to see the previous 3-4 minutes of footage. For instance, if you’re getting in a car I don’t need to know that you took the keys from your purse, put them in the door, pulled the handle, took the keys out of the door, put them in the ignition, turned the keys, well you get the idea. Some of this shit is implied! And if your mom leaves you to babysit your younger sibling (who’s probably in college) they ain’t gonna give you their cell phone number (yup, that happened).

In between making fun of the movie, which is what we do best, the schlockers faces portrayed a sort of ambivalence about life in general while they stared at the screen. I believe a couple of them were pondering if this feeling was equivalent to purgatory. At 40 minutes in we took a unanimous vote to move it up to 1.5x speed. And a collective sigh of relief was felt when we realized the credits took up the final 8 minutes.

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“How did she drown??? She’s so buoyant!”

Was the movie really that bad? Ummmmm, No. Should they have made room in the budget for a tripod? Yes. (and no this was not a Blair Witch/ Cloverfield aesthetic). Were there a lot of special effects including gore, condom like intestines, gun shots, and runaway extras from The Walking Dead? Yes. Did you have to wade through a shit ton of dialogue that didn’t advance “the plot” or sound realistic outside of a porno? Yes.

All in all the first half hour of the movie was a testament to how awesome my fellow schlockers are. We laughed, made fun of each other, made fun of the movie, and made fun of Jake. But then the round of drinks ran out, and the chips started to scrape at the bottom of a dish which once held BLT dip (you don’t wanna know how awesome this stuff was), and nothing short of a porno slaughter, Bruce Campbell cameo, hundred dollar bill falling out of the case could have saved this mess. We REALLY, REALLY, REALLY wanted to like this movie, but in the end there was just too much to love.

1/5 leopard tattoos

What it has: a cautionary statement about breast implants, overdoses, sex through underwear, expensive cars, wheelchair victim, false ending, a great premise, nuevo Japan, lotsa guns, a feel for small town Carolina, and a need for a good editor.

What it’s missing: natural dialogue, virgins, outtakes as main footage (there were some nice moments there), and confidence in the viewer to read between the lines

Drink of the night:

Escort through Purgatory

4 parts tequila

1 part agave nectar

6 parts pineapple juice

tabasco to taste

squeeze of lime

cilantro to taste

Serve over ice.

Happy Birthday To Me (watched 6/10/14)

Posted in 3 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 06/10/2014 by schlockfest

Happy Birthday to Me has been on our schlock list for a very, very, very, very long time. I think we’ve been thinking about watching this one for at least 18 months. Well we finally did, in a tequila fueled, Pat missing (okay Jen too), lemon bar gorging event that seemed to go on for hours.

Would you like it skewered?

Would you like it skewered?

The thing about HBTM is it’s deceptive on so many levels. Everything about the exterior screams schlock from the cover art of the skewer stabbing the head to the bizarre title to the even more prolific “acting”. However, once you delve into this 111 minute flick (that’s right almost 2 freaking hours!!) you realize the mind boggling complexity you’ve stepped into. Primer? Memento? How about Where in the Fucking World is Carmen Sandiego? Because by the time this bloodfest ends, the only things you can be sure of, are some people died and they all went to the same school. Don’t get me wrong, it’s not like chasing Fulci through hell or encountering Death Bed: The Bed that Eats. Happy Birthday to Me is probably a legitimate whodunnit, but by the end you may not know schlock from Shinola.

The murder scenes are completely original and I sure as hell ain’t gonna ruin them for you. They definitely got some yells from us, and had us looking forward to the next one. HBTM does fall in that black hole of the early eighties where nudity wasn’t really used much less considered. How many of you wear a bra under your robe after taking your underwear off? Didn’t think so. Don’t expect much in this category except the men’s shorts. They don’t leave a whole lot to the imagination. Think Andouillette saran wrapped to a mannequin and you’re pretty much there.

Hello big guy

Hello big guy

There was a lot of buildup and hope going into this schlock night and it didn’t let us down. Jake would have bumped the score up if there were some canapes to go with all the andouillette, but on the whole there wasn’t a lot to dislike and a lot more to love. It’s fun but goes a bit long trying to tie the plot together. The end alone is such macabre awesomeness it deserves shclockolades of the highest order. Watch it with some friends and make fun of the one y’all pretend to like during the slow moments. Stay tuned next week when Pat returns with  tasty beverages and snacks (oh yeah, and Jen too) and picks the movie. It should be awful.

3.5/5 Blue and Gray scarves

What it has: Creepy old man touching (Hello SIDE BOOB!), Daredevil motorcycle jumping, Creepy Haircuts, Daredevil car jumping, Norman Bates as an old man, Revelatory police, Romantic fires, Prelude to Scream, Embroidered panties, Red herrings, and it wouldn’t be complete without a birthday cake

What it’s missing: a good canadian accent, a good reason for the killings, you not watching it

Agh! I almost forgot the drink of the night:

Watermelon Jalapeno margaritas

5 Cups cubed watermelon, pureed and mashed through a sieve

1/8 cup simple syrup

1/2 C lime juice (I would add more next time)

1/2 C Citronage (or triple sec)

1 C Jalapeno infused tequila (a schlocker at large made ours)

1/2 C of Blanco tequila

Mix together, chill up to an hour and serve over ice.

Friday the 13th Part III (watched 5/30/14)

Posted in 3 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 06/01/2014 by schlockfest

Continuing with my rogue viewing I went on to watch Part III a few hours later. Undead Jason, who clearly should have been killed when he was a wee young lad, is at it again making a wreck out of what clearly should have been worry free weekend of teenage sex-u-al intercourse. This episode is where the series clearly begins to own it’s campiness. Friday the 13th Part III has all the obligatory tropes: Bikers, Old Man warning, the prude, the jokester, cars that run out of gas (though they made this work), hanging bodies,

Steve Miner, the director, (who also did Part II) was definitely feeling the latitude here. The effects step over the line of cheese precedents set by the previous two films, and the inability of the characters to recognize danger is quite amazing. “What? You’re pointing a harpoon gun at me. Oh stop playing around and help me come find my contact.” It’s not problematic at all. The combination of these elements and  the production’s ability to recognize it’s place in the franchise make it all the more fun. Is it cheesy? Sure. Is it silly? Of Course. And full of cliches? Hell yeah, but they may not have been then.

I watched this one alone, battling an stupid head cold, while the rest of my compatriots were out “team building”. I think that’s doing the things the teenagers get killed for in these campy horror films. It doesn’t matter though: alone, together it’s plenty of fun. There’s a million places you can read the plot summary for this one, but don’t. Just go watch the damn thing. It’s worth every minute.

3.5/5 crochet needles

What it has: THE hockey mask (finally!), Mice, a bunny, Fish Food, fly eggs, knives, religious  zealot, hammock, shower scene, nerd revenge, a harpoon gun, and yet another PTSD case

What it’s missing: Any way to kill Jason

Friday the 13th Part II (watched 5/30/14)

Posted in 4 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 05/31/2014 by schlockfest

So I went rogue and watched a movie without my fellow schlockers. Actually I watched 2, in the blog to follow I’ll put up my thoughts on Part III. Why on earth would I abandon my fellow schlockers? Because this movie violates rule #1 of schlock: I’ve seen it before, and I’m sure quite a few of them had to0.

First off I was nervous. Not about Jason showing up and shoving an icepick into my head, but because I hadn’t seen the original in a a really, really long time. Now *spoiler alert for the original* I remembered his mom was crazy fucked up and killed all the campers, at least I was pretty sure. But I couldn’t remember what the hell happened to Jason and why she was so pissed off. I started off searching the good ole’ webs and then realized “this was the freakin 80s! They had to recap everything.” Sure enough the beginning starts off with the lone survivor from the original having nightmares, which are the perfect segue for the memory challenged or the skip-aheaders. It’s a great way to start and the damn thing just keeps getting better.I warned youuuuuu......

Friday the 13th is a freaking classic for a reason and it’s sequel is no slouch in the bedroom either. Teenagers wanna have sex and Jason wants to kill people. You like sex. You like Jason. It’s really a no brainer. The thing about this movie: it’s fun if you’re by yourself and it’s fun with a group of people. You can’t go wrong here, from the tight claustrophobic cropping of the camera to the endless shots of Jason’s feet as he walks around stalking girls in tight shorts and boys with bad hair. There are still some genuine scares, but for the most part it’s all popcorn fodder. If you haven’t seen it in a while throw it on and a hockey mask for good measure, and remember It’s all done now. Mommy is pleased. You’ve done a good job.

4/5 headless moms

What it’s got: Dead campers, soon to be dead campers, psychology, Rolling Rock, the obligatory warning and the obligatory skinny dip, Betsy Palmer, machetes, fluffy dog with a bow in it’s hair, who where’s short shorts?

What it’s missing: Any way for Ginny to not be batshit crazy for the rest of her life

 

 

Father’s Day (The Movie, watched 5/27/14)

Posted in 3 Brains, Should've been 45 minutes with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 05/28/2014 by schlockfest

“Water slides, there’s nothing sacred to this monster.”

IMG_7762

Chainsaw Strippers

An anal raping, maple syrup gorging, parallel universe travelling, self mutilating father fucker of a film. Yup, that about sums it up right there. Father’s Day was a glorious Troma train wreck. Your car is stuck waiting to get over the tracks, but it doesn’t matter because there are bodies, limbs, chainsaws, and in this case, a lot of bloody cocks popping out all over the place. The acting was atrociously, wonderfully tongue in cheek. However,  99 minutes after the moviestarted I’m not sure any one of us could have given you a linear synopsis of what happened, and it wasn’t because of the brownies.

IMG_7764

Penis slicing

If I remember right, and I could definitely be wrong, Lloyd Kaufman shows up towards the end as god. His emergence into the film pretty much cements what he has come to think of himself. (His intros to these limited release Troma’s need to die like strippers with chainsaws). And so most of the film goes attempting to make fun of just about anything that’s been established in any genre from Horror to Drag Stars to the Catholic Church. Now that I think about it the greatest blasphemy committed in this priest murdering, penis splicing, demon filled flick is Kaufman’s cameo. Did I mention the killer is named Fuchman?

If I were watching this garbage disposal full of glorious goriness by myself I’d start to have a lot of questions about what I was doing with my life. As a party movie it works it’s magic though. I can’t say we give it the full seal of approval as it needed to end at exactly 65:50, after that point the insanity just spins too far out of control. Well really, it became as boring as some demon seeking, demon fucking, demon exterminating, suicide solution drag artists can be, and believe it or not it gets tiring.

If you’re still reading this blog there’s probably nothing I can say to stop you from watching this “film”. Just set your expectation-o-meter to Medium and you’ll be totally happy. I hear drinking helps too.

After further contemplation I’m giving it a bump up to 2.8/5 glowing eyes. (This will round it up to the 3 brain category)

What it has: a bear, Fulci style eye-ecutting, poison berries, false ending, FUCHMAN, 34 extra minutes of movie, Maple syrup, possessed priest, a tome that looks an awful lot like the Nechronomicon, and a Maple tree tap

What it’s missing: Jason, Freddy, and the Loch Ness Monster

Drink of the evening was created and named:

The Fuchman

2 Parts Espolon

1/2 Part Cointreau

1 Part Lime Juice

1/2 Part Crissy’s Ghost Pepper Simply Syrup

Finish with Ice and Seltzer

(Add homemade grenadine for the bloody version)

 

 

 

Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (watched 5/19/14)

Posted in 3 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 05/20/2014 by schlockfest

It sounds promising, right? It was directed by Sam Peckinpah, and if you’ve seen Straw Dogs, which he directed three years earlier, you probably have a certain set of expectations. (We’ll get back to that in a moment though). BMHAG is described by nearly everyone as an ultra-violent epic, but it’s now one of those “maybe back in the day” films. Straw Dogs held an intensity in the story and acting, though punctuated with a nauseating rape, that culminated in an intensely climactic event. Juxtaposed against Alfredo Garcia we were often wondering if we were watching a romantic drama. Quite simply, in the former you care a lot about the characters. In Alfredo we really didn’t give a shit and it’s important because you spend so much damn time listening to them talk about their dreams and…. marriage.

That damn head is here somewhere...

That damn head is here somewhere…

We managed to pass some of the time by playing a game of hot potato, making a second round of Longdogs (see recipe at the end), and wondering when the movie would raise itself to schlocky standards. It was a decent film, but the highlight of the night was the batch of cookies Heather made. BMHAG certainly won’t be landing on my rewatch list  anytime soon, and if you want to understand the director and can take the intensity, go with Straw Dogs. I’m guessing we’ll be swinging the pendulum next week to get in some really bad special effects and maybe a werewolf or radioactive beast. I can’t wait.

We missed you Jake. You didn’t miss much. There weren’t any children in the film, well except the one being carried around in a coffin. Come back from Tahoe and bring some slasher goodness with you. I’m sorry if this post seem rather uninspired, maybe that alone speaks for itself.

3/5 Flies

What it has: Serenades, Piano Playing, Bad guys, a good guy?, a dead guy, dry ice, 10k dollars, Jose Cuervo Silver, and a station wagon

What it’s missing: something that lives up to the opening scene, mariachis, a werewolf

Drink of the evening, Longdog:

2 oz Gin

2 oz Tequila

1 oz Triple Sec

2 oz Lemonade

1 oz Lime Juice

(Drink beat the movie. Bottoms Up!)

Her (watched 5/18/14)

Posted in 2 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 05/18/2014 by schlockfest

I know. I know. This movie doesn’t belong on this blog. And please believe me when I say I’m not the voice of dissent for the sake of dissenting, but I felt like somebody needed to be the big warning sticker on this movie that said “Save yourself 2 hours”. Right now it has an 8.2 rating on IMDB. For me that’s  something akin to driving down the interstate where you see a nasty accident and miles of cars stopped in anticipation of moving again. A little further down the road you see cars moving freely about to get lodged in the epic traffic jam that is Her. I was moving freely at 8:00. I got my life back at 10:00.

It started off with a tremendous amount of promise like most trips into the Adirondacks on a 4th of July weekend, but about 20 minutes in it became an epic mess of relationship awkwardness. The last line I remember enjoying was “choke me with the dead cat”. After that, I felt like I was a voyeur on the sad pathetic potential of our digitally interwoven future. It’s an excellent premise, and the Director of Photography contributed some pristine moments which question our relationship with these digital devices we carry around, but the medium was ultimately tried, tired, and laughable for it’s didactically trite metaphors.

Looking at Ted, which you do a lot of.

Looking at Ted, which you do a lot of.

I’m biased. I watch a lot of crap. My wife loves the romantic flicks though. She’s a real sucker for them. In fact in the realm of Venn diagrams our movie overlap is very, very, very, very tiny. So small we tend to agree on parts of movies instead of the whole thing. That said, most movies we watch fall into one of our categories of appreciation. Her failed both of us. We’re not the be all end all, but it’s a pretty big fucking achievement.

I know few people will ever stumble across this post, and fewer still will heed the warning. Regardless here’s some advice on how to prepare yourself:

1) Set the expectation bar to low.

2) Imagine the movie is renamed Watching Ted Twombly’s Face

3) Make lot’s of snacks, bring a book, possibly a video game (whatever kept you company in those quiet awkward moments after your parents got into an argument, that’s pretty much how you’ll spend an hour of the film).

4) Once Scarlett Johansson starts talking (and it hurts to say this), bump it up to 3x speed. She does a fine job, but the “Best Original Screenplay” suggests there were a TON of remakes last year…

Be your own judge (really don’t, just skip the damn thing) but for me it was:

2/5 elevator rides

What it has: Swearing animated figures, boiling tea kettle, ear buds, 100 minutes of awkwardness, dynamic facial gestures by Joaquin Phoenix, an excellent aesthetic sense, weird pants, and a whole new realm of ChatRoulette

What it’s missing: Anything that wasn’t covered in Say Anything, litter, poor folks, body on body intercourse

 

 

 

 

Sorcerer (watched 5/12/14)

Posted in 4 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 05/13/2014 by schlockfest

Howdy schlockianados! I was realized it was 4 years and 2 months ago (give or take a few days) that I laid the Brains, Blood, Boomsticks Scepter down and strayed from writing about the crap we love to watch. Well I can say after two weeks back on the wagon it feels like we’re racing through the woods at night clubbing anything that moves and calling ourselves heroes. I’m not sure what the last sentence means, but I think it means we’re back.

This week continuing our campaign we watched William Friedkin’s Sorcerer (a remake of the French The Wages of Fear). Yeah, it’s the same Friedkin that made The Exorcist (you don’t have to waste time checking IMDB). You probably haven’t heard of it because who the hell would name a flick about assassins, truck drivers hauling nitroglycerin, and super mega explosions Sorcerer is beyond me, and apparently it was beyond his audience too. They all decided to go out and see Star Wars which came out the same week and was aptly enough about an intergalactic laser fight…. hmmmmm… Star Wars… go figure.

Since nobody saw the movie, Friedkin decided to dub it the best film of his career, and the rest of us were too busy wondering if Luke and Leia were ever gonna do it. Turns out Friedkin needed a PR firm to help him with this damn fine film, and we came up with some titles (based on mixed drinks) that really would have helped this movie sell some tickets. In no particular order we recommend: Adios Motherfucker, Truck Punch, Fire Dragon, or CHOMP (Cro-Magnon Haulers of Mortal Peril)… okay so I made the last one up.

Crossing the Bridge

Crossing the Bridge

Anyway it turns out it’s a damn fine flick, and to quote one observer “this movie has a lot of truck driving.” The truck driving takes place over some damn fine cinematography though, even if does take quite some time for the story to develop. To be perfectly honest there was a lot of talking going on during the first half hour which made the sub titles hard to read, but overall only affected our empathy for the characters (we had none). The stories pretty clear even though Friedkin works hard to make it seem more complicated than it really is: Some dudes do some bad things. Those dudes flee to South America. Said dudes are out of money and agree to take on a suicide trucking mission so they can get back to drinking and hookers.

We were continually delighted by the well composed cinematography which was punctuated by some fantastic explosions. The scene where the trucks cross the rope bridge is every bit as nail biting as was advertised and probably because it was absolute hell to film. After viewing the film it felt more like a metaphor for the arduous journey it took for Friedkin to complete the movie than the existentialist journey it’s purported to be. The only thing that got this film completed was his absolute desire and love for it. It’s also what probably broke his back as a director, and anyone’s desire to finance his work in the future.

What it has: Explosions!, brilliant cinematography, fire, really weird noses, lot’s of truck driving, watches, Nitroglycerine and quite a few corpses

What is doesn’t have: Sylvester Stallone, any freaking special features (on the DVD), a good title, a brave helicopter pilot, or a good reward (8000 pesos, really?!?!)

Watch it if: You’re a fan of the director, love great cinematography, enjoy well crafted films, have a thing for truck drivers layered in sweat and grime.

I rate it 4/5 pesos (there’s really not much wrong here, it  just wasn’t “perfect”)

What we drank with it:

Adios Motherfucker

3/4 oz Black Velvet

3/4 oz Jack Daniels

1/4 oz Peach Schnapps

1/4 oz grenadine syrup

1/2 oz sweet sour

Shake’em together over ice and hold on to yer titties….

Who Can Kill A Child (watched 5/5/14)

Posted in 4 Brains with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on 05/06/2014 by schlockfest

Happy Schlocko de Mayo as we celebrate the triumphant return of schlockfest. The unanimous group selection this week was the aforementioned Who Can Kill A Child? Originally it was released in the US as Island of the Damned, which meant they chopped about five minutes off of it. Now in a group setting you should be warned WCKAC opens with historical footage of Auschwitz, The Vietnam War, famines in Asia and Africa all showing…. you guessed it…. corpses of children. It can be kind of a buzz kill unless your group is prone to short term memory loss, alcoholism, or could kill a child.

Child Killer...

Child Killer…

This opening was of course chopped off for the US release because, well we’re Americans, and we couldn’t have our utopian ideals tampered with. All kidding aside this film is an incredible find. Guillermo Del Torro has cited it as influential on Pan’s Labyrinth. There’s nothing plasticized about any of the characters in the film, and there are some really solid performances by the children. You have to be down for 70s pacing and a few excessive attempts at tension building, but overall there’s not much to dislike about this film (and Jake, Pat, & Jen used the slower moments for a some good ole 70s free love). If you’re looking for a good, fun lovin’ slasher you better look elsewhere, however if you’re looking for some key tie-ins to cinema (think Battle Royale meets Night of the Living Dead, with an emphasis on the psychological factor) then give this one a shot.

Line of the evening: “Are these guys supposed to be British?”

“Of course they are, look at their teeth.”

I’d give this one 4/5 Rotisserie Chickens (as an update some members of schlock were curious why this didn’t make a “5”. The following reasons: excessive non-sequitur genocide sequence, extra 15 minutes of pacing they could have left out, they should’ve killed more kids!)