Mail call from the past week! MVDvisual’s Bath Salt Zombies, which you know and can read my review here, and V/H/S/ from Magnet Releasing! Review to come!

Mail call from the past week! MVDvisual’s Bath Salt Zombies, which you know and can read my review here, and V/H/S/ from Magnet Releasing! Review to come!

Every so often, a hole must be filled. This hole is the deepest, darkness, most horrifying and brutally stricken hole a single person would imagine if they had the fortitude to ever do so. The reason this hole needs to be filled lies majorly with curiosity and morbidness. Human nature is quirky and our senses need to be overloaded with fear and shock when the time calls for it. Jee-woon Kim’s I Saw the Devil fills that hole and exceeds to overflow it with unmerciful loathing which will haunt you long after the credits roll.
A solitary man rapes and dismembers young women in order to appease his appetite for human suffering, but when when one of his victims turns out to be the pregnant fiance of a secret service agent and a former police chief’s daughter, he may have made a big mistake. The agent devises a plan to find his fiance’s killer and play a capture and release torture game in order to inflict as much as pain as the killer has caused the agent’s fiance. What the agent doesn’t realize is that this killer is relentless when it comes to getting even and nothing will stop his destructive path.
As a graduate of film studies, my viewing pleasure has changed to minus “viewing” and adding “analytical” to make it now my viewing analytical. Taking classes on film sucks the fun at watching Michael Bay and Uwe Boll films which is not really a bad thing, but you’re programmed to pick out the flaws in every little detail. One thing we learned in class is that there is a purpose for everything in the mise-en-scene; every street lamp as a purpose so says Alfred Hitchcock. Obviously, these people who expect you to guess the significance of each action and every prop didn’t expect the killer tire film Rubber to ever be created.
Robert wakes up in the desert. He tries to move only to keep falling down. As he eventually gets the hang of it, he crosses paths with various objects and creatures in which he destroys…with his mind. Besides Robert’s murderous telekinetic powers, Robert other’s mysterious issue is that he is also a used vehicle tire. Robert becomes obsessed with a beautiful young woman and won’t stop killing folks until he gets what he wants.