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Red: Werewolf Hunter Review

October 10, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

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Plot: The real-life descendants of Little Red Riding Hood are dedicated werewolf hunters, but Virginia “Red” Sullivan, her generation’s head tracker, faces a horrible conflict when her fiancé, Nathan, is bitten by a werewolf and she must protect him.

Review: I’ve had this movie for quite some time and always skipped over it as I knew this was a SyFy original picture, so I was expecting cheesiness, jokiness and ludacris CGI as with many that come out of the popular cable channel. Let me tell you, it’s not all bad, still not a glowing praise but read on.

The story is run of the mill; a special agent falls in love and hides her true background from her beau. When she takes her new found lover to her hometown all hell breaks loose and her true life style is exposed. She is the leader of her family’s werewolf hunting escapades and when her boyfriend gets bit by a new breed of werewolves that can turn during the daylight, she struggles to maintain her bloodline and her new found loyalty to her soon to be husband.

There are a few things that always come to my mind when I think of this movie. Her family calls her “Red” and you guessed it, she has bright red hair, but that is not the reason for the name, you also guessed it; they had to take 5 minutes out of the movie to explain it. How predictable and pretty lame writing. The other point that stands out, this is a positive note; several of the man-to-wolf transformations were pretty good. It’s all CGI but many of them were very credible, except and this is a big except, when they get to total hairy werewolves, its garbage. Video games have better effects than this movie.

The score and sound effects were satisfactory, nothing startling with jump appeal, but then again were talking about fake-looking werewolves so a movie like this couldn’t scare a teenager who never seen a horror movie. The action scenes were passable as was the acting. Good ole Stephen McHattie from Summer’s Blood and Pontypool plays the leader of the werewolves, and is by far the star of this movie, way over the lead Felicia Day who has been in umpteen TV shows.

I will say that Red: Werewolf Hunter kept me watching. There was an entertaining appeal to it, and even though I was lying in bed tired, I couldn’t doze off because there was things about it that you wanted to find out how the movie was going to conclude. Maybe it was McHattie, maybe it was some of the initial transformation scenes, whatever it was I don’t feel like I wasted any time by watching this.

Closing out the Red: Werewolf Hunter review, I will say that if you are a fan of werewolf-style movies I think you should take a watch on this. There were some twists to the story that I thought were credible. But for all other horror fans, skip this one by. If you are in need of a good werewolf movie, four always come to mind; Underworld, Ginger Snaps, The Howling and Wolfen. You may wonder why I excluded An American Werewolf In London; while it does have the best man-to-werewolf transformation ever filmed, I loathe the comic undertones that were inbred in that film.

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Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews Tagged With: american, cgi, chesler, day, felicia, ginger, Howling, hunter, kavan, london, mchattie, perlmutter, Pontypool, productions, red, sheldon, smith, snaps, stephen, summers blood, syfy, underworld, wilson, Wolfen

Dawning Review

June 28, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

Dawning Cover PosterMovie: Dawning
Year: 2009
Studio: Wholecrue Productions
Director: Gregg Holtgrewe
Stars: Najarra Townsend,  Christine Kellogg-Darrin, Jonas Goslow
Language: English
Length: 82 Minutes
Sub-Genre: Thriller, Supernatural

 

Plot: Strange things start happening when a brother and sister show up to visit their father and step-mother in northern Minnesota, beginning with a mysterious attack on the family dog. But the plot thickens when a stranger appears, and his arrival upsets what at best was only a tentative balance and the pretense at civility begins to crumble. Soon, their lack of trust in each other exposes their weaknesses and what the stranger has started, whatever is waiting in the dark may finish.

Review: Let’s see where to start on this crud. We will begin with a few facts this time. Dawning was made for $115,000 which is quite substantial for an independent horror film. After you see the movie though, you will be in amazement at what in the world it was spent on. Another tidbit for Dawning is; while it is listed as a 2009 movie, which is when the movie wrapped filming, it actually didn’t get released until June 2011, probably due to editing, post-production and distribution.

Moving on to the story. You are dealing with 4 family members the whole movie. And what was such a turn-off is; as a viewer, you are witnessing a dysfunctional family which gets so tiresome and sickening. Sitting through almost 80 minutes of arguing and bantering with nothing happening. You do get a ever so small jolt with the fifth character in the film; a stranger shows up played by Daniel Jay Salmen, who is without a doubt the best actor in Dawning.

Eventually as time passes, grueling time might I add, you are led to believe that there is some unknown evil presence that is coercing and playing tricks on the mind, turning everyone against one another. That is, if you can even make it that far in the film and don’t shut it off. Nothing, and I mean nothing happens in this movie.

Let’s summarize Dawning; stupid story, poor acting, jerky camerawork, weak dialog, completely unbelievable scenarios, and I feel I must spell it out, B-O-R-I-N-G. I struggled to stay focused on this movie, and this is one that you will fall asleep on. Final words, way too many faults and please heed my warning; avoid like the plague.

Reviewer: BillChete
Date: 06/28/2012
Rating: 1/10
Recommendation: Avoid
Trailer: Watch
DVD: Barnes & Noble
BluRay: N/A
Social Media: Twitter

Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews Tagged With: christine, daniel, darrin, dawning, goslow, gregg, holtgrewe, horror, independent, jay, jonas, kellogg, najarra, productions, salmen, thriller, townsend, wholecrue

Evidence Review

April 5, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

Evidence Cover PosterMovie: Evidence
Year: 2011
Studio: RynoRyder Productions
Director: Howie Askins
Stars: Ryan McCoy, Brett Rosenberg
Language: English
Length: 73 Minutes
Sub-Genre: Found Footage
 

Plot: Four friends embark on a camping trip to an isolated wilderness to shoot a documentary one of them is making. On the first night the group hear blood-curdling cries and see unexplainable shadows surrounding the camp causing them to question whether they should leave. Suddenly the night takes a terrifying turn when one of the group goes missing and the remaining three realize they are being brutally hunted… but by what?

Review: Well, where should I begin?  With the past success of The Blair Witch Project and the most recent success of the Paranormal Activity series, the found footage film is alive and well…which most of the time sucks for the horror fan.  Let me be honest here, I am not a huge fan of the found footage sub-genre, but occasionally there is something worth writing about.  And Evidence just might be that “needle in a haystack”, if I do say so myself.

It is your basic run of the mill story about a group of friends that decide to take a camping trip.  One of the friends decides to make a documentary film about his best friend and his first time “roughing it, in the great outdoors.”  It does start out giving you that feeling of…”I’ve seen this before.”  Well folks, not for long.  This movie is not like anything you have watched in the past.  I really don’t want to give too much away about this film, but damn do I want to.

The initial opening act of the film deals with some very cool characters that are very easy to connect with, which is mainly due to the fact that they are likable in a sense.  The film does have a few slow spots, but the characters keep you into the film.  But hey, once this thing gets going…boy does it get going.

In the second part of the film, we start to get to the good stuff.  The friends start hearing things and seeing some strange things that peak their interest, and make them want to get the hell out of the woods.  In Evidence, you actually get to see some of the strange goings on before it is balls to the wall in the third act.

The third act is an act all unto itself, and that might just be an understatement.  Talk about a twist to the end of this film.  I think it has more twists, ups and downs, and insanity than a roller coaster.  The things at the end of this film, I have never seen before, and I have been talking about this movie all day.  I can’t wait to watch it again, and look for things that I am sure I missed.

Evidence will affect you that is for sure…just be prepared to see things that you haven’t seen before.  Give this movie a chance, even if you’re not a fan of found footage.  You might just be surprised at this little movie.  You won’t be disappointed…I know that I wasn’t.

Check out Land Of The Creeps with myself and GregaMortis and “Help Keep Horror Alive.”

Reviewer: Haddonfield Hatchet
Date: 04/05/2012
Rating: 7½/10
Recommendation: Buy
Trailer: Watch
DVD: Amazon.uk
BluRay: N/A
Social Media: Facebook

Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews Tagged With: activity, askins, blair, brett, documentary, evidence, footage, found, howie, mccoy, paranormal, productions, project, rosenberg, ryan, rynoryder, witch

Followed Home Review

March 10, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

Followed Home Cover PosterMovie: Followed Home
Year: 2010
Studio: Think Dreamer Productions
Director: Joaquin F. Palma 
Language: English
Length: 73 Minutes
Sub-Genre: Slasher

Plot: Young friends on a weekend outing have the misfortune of witnessing a murder…only to be followed home by the killer. Unaware they’re being stalked by a maniac, the traumatized quartet of vacationers try to forget about the carnage…but then, they realize they’ve been followed home. Ever seen something scary and walked away feeling safe? Beware: You may have been…followed home!

Review: I am always excited when a new slasher hits the market, and after the initial scene I was thinking Followed Home had something strong going for it. In typical fashion, in the most clever of slashers, the filmmakers thrust you into the terror with a brutal opening. Followed Home was no exception; an initial stabbing with tension and screaming, but this movie takes a nosedive, and a fast one at that.

We meet 4 friends, Sam (Zachary Ryan Block), a new proprietor of his own website design firm, his girlfriend Lauren (Tammy De Kauwe) and 2 employees. These 4 head out into the mountains for a peaceful romp in a cabin. It’s during these 30 minutes, where you must suffer with the hideously poor dialog and lazy acting. The opening scene girl comes running to their abode which traumatizes them, they then struggle to maintain their own sanity.

Since the audience must suffer through the garbage time of the film, you are praying it can only get better when the hooded madman offs the friends one-by-one. It is quite the opposite; the attack scenes are hilariously bad and the scare scenes are utter failures. Not to mention the lackluster music and sound effects.

I racked my brain to think of some positive things in Followed Home, but I came away with basically zilch. This was one of the most boring slashers I have ever seen in my life. Coming in at a shade over an hour, I struggled whole heartedly to make it to the end. I can’t believe in a genre that is never boring you could botch such a thing.

Followed Home was released on DVD 4 months ago, and I am befuddled on how this got such wide distribution in many notable online retailers. This is bottom of the barrel horror fans. Overall, this is an epic disaster in the slasher genre, avoid it at all costs! Final rating is 1½.

Reviewer: BillChete
Date: 03/10/2012
Rating: 1½/10
Recommendation: Avoid
Trailer: Watch
DVD: Buy.com
BluRay: N/A
Social Media: Facebook

Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews Tagged With: block, de, dreamer, facebook, followed, home, joaquin, kauwe, palma, productions, ryan, slasher, tammy, think, zachary

The Tenant Review

January 19, 2012 By Horror Palace Leave a Comment

The Tenant Cover PosterMovie: The Tenant
Year: 2010
Studio: ReelDreams Productions
Director: Ric La Monte
Language: English
Length: 94 Minutes
Sub-Genre: Monster, Thriller

Plot: Dr. Walter Newman is bent on ridding the human race of deficiencies via genetic manipulation. When his wife gives birth to twins, he realizes that one of his experiments has gone seriously awry. Years later, his abominable creation seeks its revenge.

Review: The Tenant begins with an engaging scene and 2 quick kills where then the movie shifts back in time to an asylum where a doctor is trying to come up with a cure to many human disabilities while ignoring his patients. This is where the story starts to drag. Half the movie focuses on a backstory when we finally jump to current day.

Michael Berryman does have a brief role in The Tenant, and he was phenomenal as always. During these experiments the doctor actually gets fluid out of his body, and this “juice” gets injected into twin fetuses in the womb, which causes one of them to become a deranged, retarded, monster so to speak.

It is this monsterized human who is terrorizing the halls of the old asylum which is now boarded up and in decay, but, it just so happens, a van-load of people breakdown right where the asylum is. The rest of The Tenant is a typical horror movie with some good kills, scary scenes with mediocre acting.

My favorite parts of this movie are when this monstrosity jumps and breaks through walls which really ratchets up the freak-out factor, giving you several startling scenes and leaves you on the edge of your seat as you never know where this creature is lurking. He also makes strange noises which is always a good thing.

Concluding the review of The Tenant; the beginning stages got boring, the characters were not that interesting after 10 minutes, be warned, then you have another 30 minutes of nothing really happening, for a horror movie that is a huge negative. It did redeem itself once you see this deformed human and what he does to some people, but taking The Tenant on a complete package, I am winding up right down the middle, and recommending a rental. It’s worth seeing but it is one that you forget shortly thereafter.

Reviewer: BillChete
Date: 01/19/2012
Rating: 5/10
Recommendation: Rental
Trailer: Watch
DVD: Amazon
BluRay: N/A
Social Media: Facebook

Filed Under: Horror Movie Reviews, Michael Berryman Tagged With: berryman, lamonte, michael, monster, monsters, monte, productions, reeldreams, ric, tenant, thriller

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