My Bloody Valentine 3-D Movie Review
My Bloody Valentine 3-D Review

"My Bloody Valentine 3-D" Overview

Rating: R
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Patrick LussierProducer : John Dunning,Andre Link,Jack L. Murray,Mike Paseornek,John Sacchi
Screenwiter : Todd Farmer,Zane Smith
Starring : Kerr Smith,Jaime King,Betsy Rue,Jensen Ackles,Tom Atkins,Kevin Tighe
When slasher films dominated the local theater chains way back in the '80s,
holidays seemed to be the sensible starting place to develop your fear
franchise. Halloween had proven profitable, and Friday the 13th definitely
scared up big bucks. So why not milk the rest of the festival calendar and see
what transpires? Sadly, for every April Fool's Day, there was a Happy Birthday
to Me.
For a long time, a cult has centered around one of the era's most talked about
titles: My Bloody Valentine. With most of its violence cut out and a "blue
collar" perspective on the carnage, it remains for many a good time guilty
pleasure. Now Lionsgate has seen fit to remake the movie, using an old '50s
gimmick as a selling point -- and you know what, it works like a
blood-spattered charm.
The setup is familiar. Ten years ago, the only survivor of a horrible mining
accident -- a man named Harry Warden -- went on an inhuman killing spree. When
it was all over, 22 people were dead, with only good friends Alex (Kerr Smith),
Sarah (Jaime King), Irene (Betsy Rue), and Tom (Jensen Ackles) left to tell the
tale. Now, bodies are piling up once again, and ex-sheriff Burke (Tom Atkins)
and local businessman Ben Foley (Kevin Tighe) think that Warden has returned.
But Axel, now the current lawman, has a different theory. He's targeting Tom,
recently returned from nearly a decade in self-imposed exile and desperate to
sell the mine and having rekindled his romance with Sarah, who oddly enough, is
married to his old buddy. Still, the visage of Warden looms large.
My Bloody Valentine 3-D is shameless. It panders. It exploits. It hits below
the belt and keeps delivering cheap shots deliciously. It is one of the most
blatantly gore-filled fright films in recent memory, starting off insane and
just getting nastier from there. A lot of credit has to go to writers Todd
Farmer and Zane Smith, as well as director Patrick Lussier. They have remained
faithful to the 1981 original while recognizing the need to update the entire
slasher genre for a 2009 audience. This isn't some film filled with
stunt-inspired, Rube Goldbergian deaths. Instead, our killer metes out
punishment with a pick axe and nothing else. But the brutality of his efforts,
matched by the amazingly graphic special effects, excuses any lapse in slice
and dice mythos.
This is a craven crowd pleaser, the kind of old school scarefest that should
have teens tweaking in their seats while shouting back at the screen. Lussier
and the gang leave nothing to chance. One sequence features a good five minutes
of nearly continuous full frontal female nudity, including the standard slayer
square off and butchering. Another finds Atkins wandering through a collection
of hacked up corpses, offal strewn everywhere. And just when it looks like
things will calm down and the script will focus on characterization and
formulaic love triangles, our gas-masked fiend shows up and starts swinging
again. This version of My Bloody Valentine must have the highest body count of
any recent fright film -- maybe ever.
The 3-D also helps. The feeling of depth, plus the lack of restraint employed
in using the dimensional device, really adds to the excitement. We don't get
too many of the obvious Dr. Tongue moments, and the effect aids in giving the
inevitable false shocks added emphasis. Still, Lussier knows what gets butts in
theater seats and there is sure to be some buzz about the ample arterial spray
on display. My Bloody Valentine 3-D actually rivals several of the Saw films in
the amount of vein juice spilled in pursuit of a plotline -- and it's
infinitely more fun. All remakes should follow this unapologetically
in-your-face effort.
Aka My Bloody Valentine 3D.
Thank God it's not Arbor Day.
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Review by Bill Gibron
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