Suspecting that people around him are turning into evil creatures, a troubled man questions whether to protect his only friend from an impending war, or from himself.
MacLeod Andrews | Wyatt | |
Evan Dumouchel | Christian | |
Margaret Ying Drake | Mara | |
Mick Casale | Psychiatrist | |
Elena Greenlee | Sandy | |
Laura Ambrose | Co-worker | |
Ben Blackshear | Hipster | |
Perry Blackshear | Polish Guy | |
Julia Guo | Kat | |
Amaani Hamid | Girl at Work | |
Jessie Kim | Hannah | |
Sang Wook Kim | Co-worker | |
Matt Lawrence | Co-worker | |
Eric Ohrt | Man in Subway | |
Carlos Palacio | Co-worker | |
Kimberly Parker | Hannah | |
Lauren Parkinson | Hannah |
Director | Perry Blackshear | |
Writer | Perry Blackshear | |
Producer | MacLeod Andrews, Perry Blackshear, Evan Dumouchel, Elena Greenlee, Kimberly Parker | |
Photography | Perry Blackshear |
Location | Deleted |
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Purchased | Jan 22, 2017 at EVO |
Quantity | 1 |
Seen | Jun 19, 2020 at our home w/bec |
Added Date | Jul 06, 2017 01:44:29 |
Modified Date | Aug 01, 2023 01:32:36 |
My quick rating - 2,9/10. Here we have a massive discrepancy between myself and IMDB raters. How anyone saw brilliance in this 2 dudes make a flick about mental illness in their apartment movie, I have no idea. Both participants (saying actors insults actual actors) are pathetic. Often just acting like it was their first beer, ever. Then there is the big alien conspiracy going on. Or we are supposed to think. The whole point I think they were working on was understanding how difficult mental illness is, and how to view it from their perspective. What do we get? 2 dudes jumping around like idiots wearing blankets. Sure, the main guy has mental problems, but what is his friends excuse for playing along? For so long? Not funny, not well done. I really can't find what in the world people are even attempting to get out of this. Oh, and not the makers fault, I think, but this is not horror in the slightest.