Directed by: Gregory
Dark
Starring: Glenn
Jacobs (AKA: Kane), Christina Vidal, Michael R. Pagan, Samantha Noble, Steven
Vidler, Rachael Taylor, Penny McNamee, Craig Horner, Luke Pegler and Mikhael
Wilder
Genre: Horror,
Slasher
Rated: R
A group of eight juvenile delinquents have been brought to
an abandoned hotel for a weekend job of cleaning it up for renovations. It’s
not long before the teenaged offenders and their chaperones are slowly being
picked off.
This film has very little to offer the viewing public. There
are only two likable characters – Christine and Kira - in the entire script and
we barely get to know them. All of the characters are very one-dimensional, but
these two appear to have some sort of back stories, which are hinted at but
never really discussed. The rest include many of Hollywood’s well-known
stereotypes: the blonde snotty girl, the vegetarian/eco-friendly girl, the
abusive jerk, the goofball, the “nice guy” and the token black guy – with
little to no personality between them. The killer might have been more
interesting if they let him go on battling his conflicting beliefs revealed during
the climax rather than rushing to the ending.
The plot was filled
with clichés as well. The killer is the way he is due to an abusive upbringing
and being brainwashed by a crazy religious zealot. He believes he is doing
God’s work by killing all sinners. He also appears to be superhuman, being able
to survive a gunshot wound to the head. People split up and get killed off. The
kids who do drugs and have sex get killed. Both “twists” were also incredibly
predictable, having been done many times before in older horror films.
The kills were boring as well. At first the eye gouging was
shocking, but it just became monotonous after a while. We don’t need to see him
take out each and every eyeball. We get it, that’s his trademark, move on. The
only interesting death was done via an inventive use for a cell phone – which
came off as rather campy. Also, the use of CGI in the final confrontation with
the killer was horribly done. It would have been much better with physical
effects rather than animated.
Lastly, there were three more small things that bothered me.
The first is the wardrobe for the female characters – they are at this hotel as
a part of a cleaning crew, yet all of them are wearing high heels. That’s a
smart thing to wear when you’re going to be on your feet all day. Second, the
random bees that apparently live inside the killer’s head and come flying out at
random. The guy is practically a walking corpse, slowly decomposing, yet strong
enough to dispatch numerous bland characters.Third, and this one is a possible spoiler so be warned: they let the worst possible character live. The one person who deserved a vicious, brutal death gets to walk out of the building with nary a scratch on him.
Overall, the film brings nothing new to the table. The
characters are bland, the plot predictable and the kills dull. The killer had
the potential to be interesting, but nothing was made of the conflict he seems
to be facing at the end of the movie. It could have been a fun flick if the
writers had actually attempted to write a believable story with likable
characters – even if it wasn’t original.
4/10
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