Viral Factor, The (2012) Review

"The Viral Factor" Chinese Theatrical Poster

“The Viral Factor” Chinese Theatrical Poster

Director: Dante Lam
Cast: Jay Chou, Nicholas Tse, Bai Bing, Lee Byung Hun, Lin Peng, Jung Woo-sung, Andy On Chi Kit, Carl Ng Ka Lung, Liu Kai Chi, Elaine Kam Yin Ling
Running Time: 120 min.

By HKFanatic

“The Viral Factor” is the latest blockbuster from Dante Lam, a man who has become one of Hong Kong’s premiere action director thanks to films like “Fire of Conscience” and “The Stool Pigeon“; it was also the first film to enter Lam into the One Hundred Million Yuan Club, for those filmmakers who earn over 100 Million Yuan at the Chinese box office. I wish I could say this was one of Lam’s better efforts. Despite a globe-hopping setting and plenty of explosions, “The Viral Factor” fails to deliver as a solid piece of action entertainment. The story just does not hold up to any kind of scrutiny.

The screenplay makes the crucial mistake of dolling out exposition to the viewer before the credits have barely finished rolling. We’re told why characters are important and why what they’re doing is important, but we’re never shown why they’re important. The film begins with a confusing series of scenes set in Jordan, as an international police force led by the Chinese (including Jay Chou) are transporting a key scientist to safety before his deadly strain of bird flu can be released to the public…or something like that.

It doesn’t take long for everything to go tits up, and here we get to see Dante Lam’s approximation of a “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare” video game battle in what is, in all honesty, probably the best set-piece in the entire movie. Questionable CG-fireballs aside, Dante Lam knows how to carefully maneuver his camera through action sequences that feel like barely controlled chaos. From there, Jay Chou heads off to Malaysia to track down his missing brother, played by bad boy actor Nichols Tse, and possibly get revenge on the team leader who betrayed him (an under-utilized Andy On). The story plays out in a confusing mix of English and Cantonese dialogue, a sure sign that the producers were trying too hard for a hit.

Dante Lam’s films have always been about his character’s personal lives and family melodrama as much as the action, but here he’s stuck with the borderline-catatonic Jay Chou in the lead, an actor who barely knows how to convey emotion. Let’s face it, Jay Chou is a Taiwanese pop idol; he’s not the kind of guy to headline a hard-hitting Hong Kong action movie. Nicholas Tse is forced to pick up the acting slack, which he does by sinking his teeth into scenes where he’s allowed to do nothing but cry or over-emote. Considering how many helicopters were likely blown up in the making of “The Viral Factor,” this is one touchy-feely movie.

I never thought I’d say a movie has too much action but the problem with “The Viral Factor” is that the screenplay doesn’t really know how to raise the stakes, so characters are always chasing after each other with little to no consequences. As I watched this movie, I felt a curious sense of detachment: actors raced around locales and tried to accomplish goals the movie had only barely communicated to me. I enjoy seeing Dante Lam playing on such a large scale, with this much production muscle behind him, but next time he needs to expend it all on a better script.

The story builds to a showdown aboard a large sea vessel, with a shootout occurring in-between shipping containers. Thanks but we’ve seen this before before in Tsui Hark’s “Knock-off” and that was staged with a hell of a lot more aplomb than what we get here. I still have nothing but respect for Dante Lam, but with “The Viral Factor” he simply went too mainstream. It was most likely a mistake to go for a story with this many characters and locations, and it was definitely a mistake to cast someone like Jay Chou in the lead. With no true hand-to-hand combat and most of the shoot-outs staged like video game cutscenes, “The Viral Factor” is missing that visceral touch that makes the best Hong Kong action movies so personal.

HKFanatic’s Rating: 5.5/10

Posted in Chinese, Reviews | Tagged , , , , , , , , , |

Cradle 2 the Grave Blu-ray (Warner)

Cradle 2 the Grave Blu-ray (Warner)

Cradle 2 the Grave Blu-ray (Warner)

RELEASE DATE: August 14, 2012

First time on Blu-ray! Warner presents 2003’s Cradle 2 the Grave (aka Black Diamond), starring Jet Li, DMX and Mark Dacascos. Directed by Romeo Must Die’s Andrzej Bartkowiak, Cradle 2 the Grave has Jet Li and DMX teaming up to rescue a jewel thief’s daughter. Check out the trailer.

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

Blu-ray and DVD Releases for 5/1/12

Fight the Fight aka Choy Lee Fut, The Speed of Light DVD (Lionsgate)

Fight the Fight aka Choy Lee Fut, The Speed of Light DVD (Lionsgate)

Unfortunately, it looks like the studios are using early May as a dumping ground for their cheap 3-pack Blu-ray sets. Oh well, maybe we’ll find a deal in here somewhere. Here are your Blu-ray and DVD releases for the week of 5/1/12:

ASIAN CINEMA

Fight the Fight (DVD) – Lionsgate brings the 2011 Chinese-language martial arts film known as “Choy Lee Fut” to Region 1 DVD. Starring Sammo Hung and Kane Kosugi! This is not the best reviewed kung fu movie out there but, knowing me, I’ll probably like it

FOREIGN CINEMA

Cirkus Columbia (DVD) – a 2010 Bosnian dark comedy about the fall of the communist regime in 1991

MAINSTREAM

Haywire (Blu-ray/DVD) – director Steven Soderbergh introduced MMA fighter Gina Carano to action movie fans worldwide with this 2011 espionage flick

Men in Black II (Blu-ray) – the 2002 sci-fi/comedy sequel starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones gets the upgrade to hi-def

Bullit/Cincinnati Kid/Getaway (Blu-ray) – three vintage Steve McQueen films in one 3-disc Blu-ray set for $20.99

Assassins/Cobra/The Specialist (Blu-ray) – I doubt anyone would call these their favorite Sylvester Stallone movies but now they’re together in one Blu-ray set. Hey, I’ll always like “Cobra.” The price is $19.99

eXistenZ/B Monkey/Malevolent (Blu-ray) – I gotta be honest, I haven’t heard of these other two films but 1999’s “eXistenZ” is a great offering from director David Cronenberg. Retail is set at $16.99

Executive Decision/Point Break/Swordfish (Blu-ray) – in this set you get “Point Break” and two other films that 1.) aren’t one of the greatest films of all time and 2.) don’t feature Keanu Reeves surfing. Price is $20.99

Deep Blue Sea/Long Kiss Goodnight/Snakes on a Plane (Blu-ray) – two films that are directed by Renny Harlin and one film that’s so preposterous it might as well have been directed by Renny Harlin. This will set you back $20.99

Body of Lies/Edge of Darkness/Pride and Glory (Blu-ray) – three contemporary action/thrillers starring notorious hotheads Russell Crowe, Mel Gibson, and Edward Norton. For $20.99

Cowboys/Green Berets/The Searchers (Blu-ray) – John Wayne rides onto Blu-ray in three movies for $20.99

Losers/Rock ‘N Rolla/Shoot ‘Em Up (Blu-ray) – “Shoot ‘Em Up,” now that’s an underrated movie. Get this three pack for, you guessed it, $20.99

Body Heat/L.A. Confidential/The Player (Blu-ray) – one of these movies is not like the other, but who am I to judge? Besides, “L.A. Confidential” is one of my favorite movies of all time. For $20.99

Beetlejuice/Charlie and the Chocolate Factory/Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride (Blu-ray) – got a niece or nephew who’s gone goth recently? This might be the perfect gift. Retails at $20.99

CLASSICS

The One That Got Away (DVD) – a 1957 film about the only German prisoner of war to ever escape from British soil during WWII

Jeremiah Johnson (Blu-ray) – Robert Redford is a rugged man of the wild in this 1972 feature, now in hi-def

Bird of Paradise: Kino Classics Edition (Blu-ray/DVD) – a 1932 classic from legendary director King Vidor (“War and Peace”)

HORROR

Wizard of Gore/The Gore Gore Girls (Blu-ray) – Herschell Gordon Lewis presents two early 70’s gore-tastic films on a Blu-ray Double Feature

Mimic 3-Film Set (Blu-ray/DVD) – did you know there was a “Mimic 2” and “Mimic 3”? Get all three films for about $20

Snow White: A Tale of Terror (DVD) – in time for “Mirror Mirror” and “Snow White and the Huntsmen,” this more horrific take on the story is re-released on DVD. Featuring Sigourney Weaver and Sam Neil

Phantoms/Darkness/Venom (Blu-ray) – three horror movies with one-word titles, but only one stars the Affleck. For $16.99

Interested in any of these movies? If so, we hope that you’ll consider ordering from our affiliate to help support this site. Thank you!

Posted in News |

Romeo Must Die Blu-ray (Warner)

Romeo Must Die Blu-ray (Warner)

Romeo Must Die Blu-ray (Warner)

RELEASE DATE: August 14, 2012

First time on Blu-ray! Warner presents 2000′s Romeo Must Die, starring Jet Li, Aaliyah, Delroy Lindo and Russell Wong. Directed by Cradle 2 the Grave’s Andrzej Bartkowiak, Romeo Must Die has Jet Li seeking out his brother’s killer; in the process, he falls for you-know-who (hint: not Delroy Lindo). Check out the trailer.

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Martial Arts Titles |

See Scott Adkins in ‘El Gringo’ – Trailer now available!

"El Gringo" Theatrical Poster

"El Gringo" Theatrical Poster

Ace martial artist and actor Scott Adkins has updated his website with a new photo gallery from his upcoming film El Gringo which he is currently filming in Baten Rouge. The film also stars Christian Slater (Broken Arrow) and is produced by Joel Silver’s After Dark Pictures, one of their first ventures into action cinema. Scott is looking bad-ass in these new pics!

Updates: After Dark Films’ new poster for El Gringo added. Also some new photos here. Beyond Hollywood has details that El Gringo will be released on VOD and in select theaters on May 11, 2012 as part of a new After Dark Action fest. Also releasing is the Cung Lu/Van Damme flick Dragon Eyes, and new films starring Dolph Lundgren and Jim Caviezel.

BREAKING NEWS: The red band trailer for El Gringo is now available. Also, check out the new poster.

Posted in News |

EXCLUSIVE: Interview with the writer/producer of the ‘No Retreat, No Surrender’ series, ‘King of the Kickboxers’ and ‘Bloodmoon’

"No Retreat, No Surrender" American Theatrical Poster

"No Retreat, No Surrender" American Theatrical Poster

In 1985, Hong Kong film mogul Ng See Yuen handpicked an aspiring writer named Keith W. Strandberg to produce a screenplay to No Retreat, No Surrender, a film that went on to become a cult classic, spawned two sequels, introduced Corey Yuen’s groundbreaking choreography to Hollywood and jump-started the career of Jean-Claude Van Damme.

Keith also produced No Retreat, No Surrender 3: Blood Brothers, The King of the Kickboxers, American Shaolin, Superfights and Bloodmoon. In this in-depth interview, Keith talks the films’ stars, on-set incidents and much more! He even mentions a possible No Retreat, No Surrender remake.

Read the interview!

Posted in News |

Check out the trailer for ‘A Muse’… just like the old man in that book by Nabakov!

"A Muse" Korean Theatrical Poster

"A Muse" Korean Theatrical Poster

Be sure and check out the trailer for the new South Korean film A Muse. According to The Chonsunilbo, A Muse is an adaptation of celebrated author Park Bum-shin’s sensational novel Eun-gyo. It follows a 70-year-old poet (Park Hae-il) who has an affair with a high school student (Kim Go-eun) and is inspired to write a book about her. But his star student (Kim Mu-yeol), who is jealous of the relationship, steals his literary work.

A Muse is directed by Jung Ji-woo, who is mostly known for screenwriting work. The film stars Memories of Murder’s Park Hae-il, War of the Arrows’ Kim Mu-yeol and newcomer Kim Go-eun, who met director Jung Ji-woo through a circle of friends and was not even aware that auditions for the film were being held.

It’s hard to watch the trailer and not think of the 1962 Stanley Kubrick movie, Adrian Lyne’s 1997 remake or Vladimir Nabokov’s 1955 novel for Lolita. I have to admit, I’m totally looking forward to this flick (I swear I’m not an old pervert!).

Posted in News |

Devilman DVD (Tokyo Shock)

Devilman DVD (Tokyo Shock)

Devilman DVD (Tokyo Shock)

RELEASE DATE: June 12, 2012

Tokyo Shock presents the DVD for Devilman, which is based on the popular manga by Go Nagai. Best friends Akira and Ryo (played by real-life twins Hisato & Yusuke Izaki) are just your average high school students until they receive word that Ryo’s father has accidentally unleashed a horde of demons while conducting experiments in Antarctica. Check out the trailer.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

My Tutor Friend 2 DVD (Pathfinder Home Entertainment)

My Tutor Friend 2 DVD (Pathfinder Home Entertainment)

My Tutor Friend 2 DVD (Pathfinder Home Entertainment)

RELEASE DATE: June 12, 2012

Pathfinder Home Entertainment presents the DVD for My Tutor Friend 2. Japanese-Korean girl Junko travels to Seoul as an exchange student in hopes of seeing a Korean student whom she had fallen in love with in Japan. Instead, fate leads her to a guy named Jong Man. Starring The Good, the Bad, and the Weird’s Lee Chung-ah and War of the Arrows’ Park Ki-woong.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

Barbarella Blu-ray (Paramount)

Barbarella Blu-ray (Paramount)

Barbarella Blu-ray (Paramount)

RELEASE DATE: July 3, 2012

Barbarella is finally making its way on Blu-ray! In the far future, a highly sexual woman is tasked with finding and stopping the evil Durand-Durand. Along the way she encounters various unusual people. Based on Jean-Claude Forrest’s French Barbarella comics, this 1968 classic is bound to satisfy you in more ways than one. Check out the trailer (you won’t be sorry!).

Posted in DVD/Blu-ray New Releases, Other Notable Titles |

The IMAX format finds success in Mainland China

Chinese audiences enjoying a 3D Film

The 3D release of James Camerons’ Titanic didn’t exactly make waves in the United States, but over in China it earned a whopping $58 million US dollars its first weekend back in theaters. The IMAX 3D re-release of the Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet-starring movie underscores just how well the IMAX format is doing in China. Although only 12 films were released in Chinese IMAX theaters this year, it is swiftly becoming the ideal way to see a film for many movie-goers.

Website Chinese Films quotes Brian Didier, a professor at Beijing Foreign Studies University, who echoes the sentiments of many with his statement: “The regular theatre is okay if they have a good sound system, but the IMAX, you know, you just have that peripheral vision that is also putting you into the screen.

Right now the only detriment to seeing more IMAX theaters in China is the cost – the cost of building such expansive theaters and the price of real estate. However, there is a strong feeling that costs will be driven down soon enough by rising technology. The end result is that IMAX is here to stay, in America and abroad.

Posted in News |

Paradise DVD (Pathfinder Home Entertainment)

Paradise DVD (Pathfinder Home Entertainment)

Paradise DVD (Pathfinder Home Entertainment)

RELEASE DATE: June 12, 2012

Pathfinder Home Entertainment presents the DVD for Paradise, directed by Stairway to Heaven’s Lee Jang Soo and written by Bambino’s Okada Yoshikazu. A woman (Kim Ha Neul) recently released from prison gets on a boat to an island called Paradise. She meets a kind-hearted teacher (Ji Jin Hee), who accepts her for who she is despite knowing her past.

Posted in Asian Titles, DVD/Blu-ray New Releases |

Danny Pang’s ‘Fairy Tale Killer’ starring Lau Ching Wan – final trailer now online!

"Fairy Tale Killer" Chinese Theatrical Poster

At a recent press conference in Beijing, Forest of Death’s Danny Pang (of the “Pang Brothers”) discussed details about his upcoming film Fairy Tale Killer, which releases in May.

This crime/thriller – reminiscent of David Fincher’s Seven and Yoon-Hyun Chang Tell Me Something – stars Full Alert’s Lau Ching Wan and A World Without Thieves’ Wang Baoqiang. The screenplay is written by Szeto Kam Yuen, who is best-known for penning some of the most memorable Milkyway Image productions, such as Too Many Ways To Be Number One, The Longest Nite and A Hero Never Dies.

Check out the trailer for Fairy Tale Killer, courtesy of Twitch.

Update: Chinese Films has some creepy new pictures from the film. The final posters for the film at Chinese Films.

BREAKING NEWS: The final trailer is now online. The film premiers on the Mainland on May 11.

Posted in News |

Punished (2011) Review

"Punished" Chinese Theatrical Poster

“Punished” Chinese Theatrical Poster

Director: Law Wing Cheong
Cast: Anthony Wong Chau Sang, Janice Man Wing San, Maggie Cheung Ho Yee, Richie Ren Yin Chi, Candy Lo Hau Yam, Charlie Cho Cha Lei, Wong Yat-Yat
Running Time: 94 min.

By HKFanatic

Revenge has become a de facto theme for Asian films over the last decade, perhaps ever since 2003’s “Oldboy.” Johnnie To, the producer on “Punished,” even helmed a movie called “Vengeance” just a few years back. Sadly, despite its strong Milkway Image pedigree, “Punished” is not one of the better revenge movies I’ve seen lately. The film fails to live up to the promise of its initial set-up or the talents of principal actors like Anthony Wong and Richie Ren.

Anthony Wong plays a wealthy, cutthroat businessman whose drug-addicted daughter is kidnapped and held for ransom. Things go south, an outcome that is revealed during the first five minutes of the movie, and soon Wong’s right-hand man (Richie Ren) is dispatched to bring the perpetrators to justice. As Richie Ren does the dirty work, Anthony Wong struggles to decide if he really wants all that blood on his hands.

Somewhat like a Quentin Tarantino movie, “Punished” unfolds in a non-linear fashion. In this case, the fractured storytelling style doesn’t really add anything to the experience – but it thankfully doesn’t make the plot any harder to follow either. If anything, the non-chronological order feels like like it’s meant to distract from the fact that, visually, the film is rather drab and workman-like. Behind the camera, “Punished” filmmaker Law Wing-Cheong opts for a ‘point and shoot’ style, with absolutely zero directorial flourishes. Too bad when this is the kind of gritty revenge story that could have benefited from some interesting cinematography. Instead I spent more time distracted by Anthony Wong’s bad haircut.

The characters in “Punished” are blatantly unlikable, which I suppose is one risk the filmmakers took. Anthony Wong’s daughter may be a messed up druggie but Wong treats her and pretty much everyone else in his life like dirt. Wong’s younger wife seems to have her own agenda, as do most of his employees. Richie Ren’s is the one exception as the stoic and tightlipped bodyguard, but even his character is stained by a criminal record and seems to have no qualms about torturing people with a sledgehammer.

If you go into this movie expecting the choreographed action or extreme bloodletting of something like “Oldboy” or “I Saw the Devil,” you’re bound to be disappointed. “Punished” is light on hard-hitting violence and, even though an Action Director is listed in the credits, the one fight scene here feels perfunctory and uninspired. Besides the flat lighting, even the set design on the movie comes across as cheap; Anthony Wong is supposed to be a wealthy Hong Kong businessman but his living space looks like a cheesier version of the hotel at the end of “2001: A Space Odyssey.”

A half-hearted Buddhist subplot sees Wong trying to let go of the physical realm and find peace after his daughter’s death, but this spiritual side-quest doesn’t achieve any actual changes in Anthony Wong’s character. Buddhist prayer beads aside, he’s still basically the same jerk at the end of the movie. I’ll give “Punished” credit for attempting to be a meditative reflection on the theme of revenge instead of just another ‘stab and shoot’ genre movie, but in the end the audience is the one who’s punished.

HKFanatic’s Rating: 5/10


By DiP

Johnnie To returns to home field after the past two years spent on making romance-oriented movies. Here, he’s the producer and let one of his long-time students and frequent ADs (Law Wing-Cheong) take the task of helming the movie. And this time, they took the opportunity to subject the themes of kidnapping and ransom to envision familiarity in new angles.

First things first, I must say that this is possibly the most powerful movie to have been made from Milkyway Image to date. It’s clear to me that To wanted to make big changes with his new output, for which he has successfully accomplished. To and co attempted something new and daring here in that they hit the stride big-time in terms of reaching viewers emotionally through a story and its’ characters. It’s very seldom you get to sympathize with characters of this scale in Milkyway movies, due to To and co usually being in high favor of visualized and stylized storytelling. Punished changes that and marks a new era which may probably be made into a tradition from here on.

The movie is strictly story/character-driven without any need to excess the narrative. Apart from the main antagonist (whoever the actor is), whose intention behind the kidnapping and ransom he got and his decision to take someone’s life remained unclear and left his characterization less fleshed out, every other central character is well-written and given enough screen-time to clear their emotional states and further motivate their actions. There’s even hints of character development in other characters that are aren’t crucial to the story, such as the tycoon’s manager (Charlie Cho, most famous for portraying the annoying lawyer in Police Story 1 and 2) and the tycoon’s son (played by Anthony Wong’s real-life son, Wong Yat-Yat). But most importantly is the underlying message of everything which is impulsiveness and determination in people: it asks you what these can cause, how you can prevent things from happening, and whether or not it’s a good or bad thing. As we follow the currents of the tycoon (Anthony Wong), the bodyguard (Richie Ren), the tycoon’s daughter (Janice Man) and wife (Maggie Cheung Hoh-Yee), the bodyguard’s shady assistant (Candy Lo), and the kidnapper’s accomplices, you will see how all this is told and resolved. Overall, these instances show a significant makeover in choices being made to produce a Milkyway movie that I hope will continue in the future.

Two things stood out the most to me though and what makes Punished totally worth seeing. The first is the acting. Props to everyone that got casted in the movie but my attention was turned to Anthony Wong and Richie Ren. Ren is someone I came to admire in Breaking News and he has since grown into a fine actor in his own right. But I think it wasn’t until Accident that he started to show major improvements and here he keeps that up playing Wong’s loyal bodyguard who will do anything to get things done fast while keeping up with his own private life outside the job. But the icing of the cake is none other than Wong himself. I haven’t really been a fan of his roles in recent movies because I feel he always plays the same cool, calm character with very little variety of acting. But he seemed to really give insanely more effort in this movie than any other ones I’ve ever seen from him – here portraying a hot-headed character who goes through alot to decide what to do and what he will gain out of the messy situation – which shows in every single scene he appears in. Big bravura for both!

The second is the soundtrack. Punished marks a step further when it comes to the music composing (done by Guy Zerafa, Dave Klotz and Chung Chi-Wing) in Milkyway movies as well. Usually in Milkyway movies, the soundtracks consist of various instruments that wholeheartedly reflects the quirkiness/peculiars of To’s personal storytelling (the reason why I love the music in his work) but as far as conjugating the music within the emotional context of the story/characters it’s mostly non-existent because it was always about the beauty of the narrative. For Punished, To made sure that story/characters were main priority so he decided to use different instruments for more intensified and gripping effect. The music ends up somewhat conventional compared to other soundtracks but it’s highly serviceable and pays off having a new sound to it still and fitting perfectly in the movie’s dramatic scenes.

After seeing alot of changes and evolution with To and co in not just film styling but also them growing big balls of their favorite actors (first Lau Ching-Wan in Mad Detective, Simon Yam in Sparrow, now Anthony Wong in Punished), it’s really incredible to see that Hong Kong still got talented people who can produce great movies and keep the HK style of film-making away from declining.

DiP’s Rating: 10/10

Posted in Chinese, Reviews | Tagged , , , , |

The giallo lives again with ‘La Memoria Del Muerto’

The phantasmagoria of "La Memoria Del Muerto"

Long for the days when Dario Argento was unleashing his atmospherically-colored Italian terrors like Suspiria and Inferno onto the world? Well, you’re not alone, but Argentinean director Javier Diment may have us covered.

Twitch Film has the full-length trailer for his new film La Memoria Del Muerto and it looks like a promising throwback to the glory days of the giallo.

Unfortunately, not much is known about the plot or when the film will be released, but if you know Spanish feel free to hop over to the film’s Facebook page and translate for us!

Update: Our commenters very graciously offer some more details for those who are curious about this unique horror film. Nataniel Costard describes the plot:

Five friends meet at a house to mourn and celebrate the life and death of one of their best friends. But the widow has another idea… one that has to do with occultism, facing your worst nightmares and surviving a whole night surrounded by death itself!

Alejandro offers a review: “The movie is simply amazing, and real effective too. It reminds a lot of Dario Argento, Sam Raimi and even a taste of Wes Craven. It’s very rare to find Argentinian horror movies well done. This is an unique exception, and it must reach international borders. Excellent acting, brilliant direction, a solid story, clever twists and for a low-budget movie, really cool and credible FXs. It’s an A+, totally recommended.”

Posted in News |