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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
"Repo Man" meets "Porky's" meets "Thou Shalt Not Kill", September 19, 2001
This review is from: Future Kill [VHS] (VHS Tape)
If you threw "Porky's", "Repo Man," and "Thou Shalt Not Kill...Except" into a blender and sprinkled a dash of 1980s fashion over top, you'd wind up with "Future-Kill," an ultralow-budget, patience-trying waste of time whose only claim to fame is the presence of Edwin Neal (as the villain) and Marilyn Burns, both refugees from the far superior "Texas Chainsaw Massacre."In the near future, a gang of misfits inhabit a city run by a bloodthirstly lunatic named, uh, Splatter (Neal). One night, some frat brothers infiltrate the urban area to carry out a prank at the order of their... frat-master (or whatever those guys are called), run into Splatter and his henchmen, and find themselves on the run for the rest of the film. Granted, the movie does have some noble stabs at social relevance, with the anti-nuke references, and the presentation of a punkish lifestyle as unified and peaceful... But "Future-Kill" is like 5 minutes of good ideas stretched out to feature length, with lots of abandoned-warehouse padding in between. The opening minutes trick the viewer into thinking that this could be a blend of horror AND comedy, but things get vicious (and tedious) pretty quickly. Much of the acting is poor (to say the least), and Neal's villain isn't given enough screen time. This movie will be mildly diverting for seasoned genre fan, but casual viewers should steer clear. "Future-Kill" isn't horrible...and it does represent a time when low-budget cinema was alive and uncompromising...but it isn't anywhere near good.
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