Movie Review: Social isolation and a sinister talking head lead to unfriendly ends in “RENT-A-PAL”
The performers deftly build a world that is uncomfortably believable and a little too close to the one we currently inhabit.
The performers deftly build a world that is uncomfortably believable and a little too close to the one we currently inhabit.
It mostly settles for rehashing its predecessor and throwing a bunch of gore and profanity against the wall to see what sticks.
AQUASLASH dedicates too much time to its petty squabbling, illicit affairs and shady real-estate deals, and not enough time to coming good on its tantalising premise.
Though this flick kicks off at 100 miles an hour, unfortunately, once the wheels stop rolling, so does the movie’s momentum.
It is possible to have a ton of fun watching a pair of haunted, autonomous pants on an overnight killing rampage, and SLAXX shows us how it is done right.