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Monday, January 16, 2023

ALMIGHTY THOR

 
The official UK (left) and Nordic (right) DVDs of Almighty Thor (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

I've long remembered seeing somewhere on YouTube several years ago a film clip featuring some very distinctive chevron-headed quadrupedal monsters, grey in colour, huge in size, and somewhat midway between mammals and reptiles in overall form. Their chevron-shaped heads were so memorable that their image stayed firmly in my mind, but I had no idea what the movie was in which they'd appeared, and despite a fair few attempts at relocating them on YT and elsewhere online as well, I was never able to do so – until 19 April 2021, that is.

For that was when, quite by chance, while looking on YT for a totally different monster movie (an Arabian Nights type film featuring a woman-headed bird, which once again I'd seen a clip of on YT ages ago but had never rediscovered or identified), a trailer for a fantasy movie entitled Almighty Thor popped up. And when I clicked this trailer, what should appear but the chevron-headed monsters that I remembered so well, plus some gigantic dragonesque hound-monsters that I also vividly recalled. Serendipity strikes again – another of my "found it at last" successes!

Here is that selfsame YT trailer for this movie, featuring these awesome monsters in all their respective cranio-triangular and canine terror! Moreover, I recently purchased Almighty Thor on DVD, and on 14 January 2023 I watched it, so here are my thoughts regarding this once-elusive movie!

 
The chevron-headed lindworms running amok in LA (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Directed by Christopher Olen Ray, and released in 2011 by The Asylum, Almighty Thor utilizes some of the principal deities from Norse mythology to weave an entirely new story that links legendary Asgard, home of the gods, to modern-day Midgard, the human world.

As is his wont, Loki, Norse god of mischief (played by Richard Grieco), is causing trouble once again in Asgard, but here he is much less mischievous and far more malevolent. Seeking to seize from Odin (former professional WCW wrestler Kevin Nash!) the all-powerful Hammer of Invincibility, Miolnir, with which he plans to kill the World Tree, thus initiating Ragnarok, the destruction of all life and existing worlds, replacing them with a new universe of his own creation instead, where he will be supreme ruler, Loki summons up from the Underworld the three enormous dragon-like hell hounds mentioned by me earlier here, which he utilizes to raze Valhalla in his relentless search for Odin and Miolnir.

 
Close-up of a lindworm (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Odin and his sons – the older, brave, battle-experienced Baldir (Jess Allen), and the younger, also brave but very inexperienced Thor (Cody Deal) – bravely attempt to thwart him, but Loki is adept in dark magic and succeeds not only in bringing about Baldir's swift death but also fatally wounding Odin. Rather than yielding Miolnir to him, however, with a final dying show of strength Odin hurls the mighty hammer through a space-time portal that immediately closes and disappears, frustrating Loki who now has no idea where Miolnir is. However, he suspects (correctly) that Odin had previously vouchsafed its location to Thor, who has survived the devastation of Valhalla, so Loki sends forth one of his humungous hounds of hell on Thor's trail.

Happily, however, before it can reach him, Thor is rescued by an eternally-young but highly-professional female warrior named Járnsaxa (Patricia Velásquez), who had protected Odin's father. She takes Thor with her through another portal into modern-day Los Angeles, and trains him in fighting skills before Loki can track them down there. But it's not long before he does, only for Thor to elude him by passing through another portal, this time taking him to the World Tree, which is where Odin had secretly told him that Miolnir would briefly appear. If Thor is not there to retrieve it, all will be lost, but after defeating its knight guardian, Thor does retrieve it, taking Miolnir back with him to Járnsaxa in LA.

 
Close-up of a hell hound (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

Unfortunately, Loki is waiting, and after tricking Thor into momentarily lowering his guard by filling his mind with false doubt concerning Járnsaxa's loyalty to him, Loki steals Miolnir, jettisons Thor and Járnsaxa to the Underworld where he has already imprisoned the immortal shades of Odin and Baldir, and unleashes from that same infernal subterranean realm some mighty lindworms – those spectacular chevron-headed monsters that had been tantalizing my memory for years. They and the hell hounds duly wreak havoc in LA while Loki makes his way to the World Tree, to kill it using Miolnir and thereby commence Ragnarok. But does he succeed, or is Thor finally mature enough to perpetrate a plan of his own, one that will put paid to Loki's, and to Loki himself, once and for all?

It is almost a tradition among cinema critics, professionals and amateurs alike, to denigrate as a matter of course any movie produced by The Asylum. And whereas it is certainly true that there is no comparison whatsoever between Almighty Thor and any of the movies in the spectacular Disney/Marvel-produced Thor franchise, there is also no comparison whatsoever between the tiny budget available to The Asylum in comparison with the stupendous equivalent available to Disney/Marvel. Taking that fundamental difference into account, I personally consider that The Asylum has done a very creditable job with Almighty Thor, most especially in relation to its CGI hell hounds and lindworms, which are as well-designed in form and effective in execution as a fair few CGI monsters in various much bigger-budgeted movies.

 
Járnsaxa (left, facing backwards), a lindworm (front centre, facing forwards), and a hell hound (behind lindworm, facing backwards) (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

True, the scenes in LA were clearly – and no doubt cheaply – shot almost entirely in a few largely deserted back streets and a parking lot. And Deal's portrayal of Thor comes across not so much as a noble albeit still somewhat inexperienced god as a surly headstrong mortal teenager who has absolutely no idea what is happening for much of the time! Never mind – as far as acting credibility is concerned, there is one example that in my mind totally redeems this movie, and that is Grieco's performance as Loki.

In the Disney/Marvel Thor movie franchise, I have always personally felt that Tom Hiddleston's Loki comes across as too mannered to be truly convincing as the Norse god of evil, but there is no such issue with Grieco. In Almighty Thor, his Loki is evil personified, his every glance, sneer, and snarl an act of savage, animalistic malevolence, and enhancing this is his deathly pale facial pallor. This in turn is even more apparent during the scenes shot in LA as Midgard, which in stark contrast to the full-colour versions in Asgard are shot almost entirely in a glacial pallet of black and pale ice-blue throughout.

 
Some lindworms disrupting traffic in LA! (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

All in all, therefore, and irrespective of the usual Asylum-berating carping and narking present in many online reviews of Almighty Thor, I enjoyed this film. And if you accept it for what it is, a low-budget fantasy flick with no pretences to be anything remotely approaching a movie of blockbuster proportions and production levels, whose creation was instead intended simply to provide some undemanding but decent entertainment with which pass a spare 90 minutes away, then you may well enjoy it too. Its monsters are certainly memorable (as my own above-described experience of them readily testifies), and so too is Grieco's Loki.

Indeed, echoing what I've said before in relation to various other films produced by The Asylum (and also Syfy, for that matter), Almighty Thor is exactly the kind of movie that I'd have totally loved had it been around back in my youth. So why not give it a go? Indeed, at the time of writing this review, Almighty Thor can be watched free of charge in its entirety on YouTube simply by clicking here.

 
A peckish lindworm! (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

But what about the other mysterious monster movie noted earlier by me here that I'd long been seeking?

In fact, within only a very short time after I'd tracked down Almighty Thor and posted details about it on my Facebook timeline page, together with a mention of that mystifying Arabian Nights film containing the woman-headed bird, a FB friend posted a reply in which he conclusively identified this latter movie! So what was it? All is revealed in a separate, brand-new Shuker In MovieLand post – so click here to read it!

To view a complete chronological listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.

 
Loki and his dragonesque hell hounds (© Christopher Olen Ray/The Asylum – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

 

 

Friday, January 13, 2023

STRANGE WORLD

 
Publicity poster for Strange World (© Don Hall/Walt Disney Pictures/Walt Disney Animated Studios/Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

What would you get if you crossed Avatar with Fantastic Voyage and rendered the result as a computer-animated movie? The answer is the dazzling Don Hall-directed 2022 Disney film that I watched on 4 January 2023 - Strange World, which certainly lives up to its title, but in the best possible manner.

Living in Avalonia, a land isolated from the rest of the world by a ring of unscaleable mountains, its citizens are shocked (pun intended!) when their crops of extraordinary energy-generating plants (pando) that power everything begin to die. It seems as if the single huge underground pando root from which they all grow is itself dying, but why?

Via a small aerial powered craft, a team of explorers headed by Avalonia president Callisto Mal voiced by Lucy Liu) bravely descend deep below the surface of Avalonia in best 'Journey to the Centre of the Earth' style in a bold bid to uncover the reason, and duly encounter an astonishing hitherto-unsuspected world beneath their own, filled with incredible life forms of psychedelic pulchritude, fluid form, tentacular terror, and winged wonder, unlike anything ever before seen. But that is only the beginning of their spectacular voyage of discovery.

It turns out that their entire world, above and below the surface of Avalonia, and in harmonious homage to the Gaia Hypothesis, is a single ginormous living organism, and that this bizarre underground realm which they are now travelling through in their craft is actually that mega-organism's internal biological system!

As if that were not mind-boggling enough, moreover, the energy-generating pando plants that the exploration team had specifically set out to save actually prove to be deadly parasitic pests that are killing the world-organism from within. Indeed, the reason why these plants are themselves dying is the concerted effort of the world-organism's weird but wonderful immune-system creatures – for that is what the bizarre beasties all around the team turn out to be – to try and save it by destroying the plants' gigantic root!

Yet all of that is itself just one aspect of this fascinating sci fi adventure movie, which also explores the complex and often contentious father/son relationship down through three generations of the Clade family – from still-indomitable if now-elderly explorer Jaeger (Dennis Quaid), via Jaeger's resolute farmer son Searcher (Jake Gyllenhaal), to Searcher's career-undecided teenage son Ethan (Jaboukie Young-White) – who are jointly leading the expeditionary team, albeit in very different directions! But will they unify their divergent driving forces and dreams sufficiently to succeed in rescuing their own world above by saving this previously-unknown one below, and within whose uncertain fate they now find themselves irrevocably immersed?

Apart from its including Disney's first openly gay animated lead character, Ethan, Strange World attracted virtually no interest, attention, or reactions from either the movie critics or the general public when it was released, swiftly sinking almost without trace. This is both a great tragedy and (at least to me) a great mystery.

For although I agree with the numerous comments of viewers online that the plot aspects focusing upon the Clades' interactions with one another tend to be less than engrossing, Strange World is an absolutely fantastic film visually, totally unlike anything previously produced even by this premier and infinitely versatile animation company, and easily ranking imho among the most artistically-inspired examples of the latter's cinematic output in recent years.

So, if you love marvelously imaginative movies with gorgeously-rendered alien landscapes populated by crazy creatures beyond your wildest dreams (some of which look like hallucinatory simulacra of the primordial but surrealistic Burgess Shale fauna!), you need to watch Strange World! Click here and here to view a couple of eye-popping official trailers for it on YouTube, and you'll see exactly what I mean!

To view a complete chronological listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.

 
A second publicity poster for Strange World (© Don Hall/Walt Disney Pictures/Walt Disney Animated Studios/Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

 

Sunday, January 8, 2023

FROM A CURSED WEREWOLF TO A SINGING CROCODILE - MY BOXING DAY BLOCKBUSTER QUARTET!

 
Publicity posters for: The Curse of the Werewolf / The Mitchells Vs The Machines / Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile / Wild In The Streets (© Terence Fisher/Hammer Film Productions/Universal-International / (© Mike Rianda/Sony Pictures Animation/Lord Miller Productions/One Cool Films/Netflix / (© Will Speck/Josh Gordon/Columbia Pictures/Eagle Pictures/TSG Entertainment II/Sony Pictures Releasing / (© Barry Shear/American International Pictures – all four images reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

On Boxing Day 2022, aka 26 December aka St Stephen's Day, I watched a quartet of movies that were dramatically diverse even by my standards of eclectic film viewing! So here are my thoughts about them.

 

 
Publicity poster for The Curse of the Werewolf (© Terence Fisher/Hammer Film Productions/Universal-International – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

THE CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF

The first in my quartet of Boxing Day movie watches was a British horror classic. Directed by Terence Fisher, based upon a Guy Endore novel entitled The Werewolf of Paris (not to be confused with a later werewolf movie bearing that title) but set in Madrid, Spain, produced by Hammer Film Productions, and released in 1961 by Universal-International, The Curse of the Werewolf provided a young Oliver Reed with his first lead role, as said lycanthrope, Leon Corledo.

I'd only ever seen this movie once before, as a youngster, when it was shown on TV here in the UK during the early 1970s, scaring me witless and [insert word rhyming with witless...]. So I always planned to watch it again sometime, and preferably in colour (this was apparently the very first full-colour werewolf-themed movie – and Hammer's only werewolf movie, surprisingly enough – but we had just a b/w TV when I originally saw it), and I recently located a DVD of it.

The story 0f how Ollie's reluctant shape-shifter Corledo strives desperately to suppress his bestial other self via the all-conquering power of true love but is doomed to damnation plays a little fast and loose with werewolf folklore, though it does showcase an interesting but nowadays largely-overlooked aspect, whereby anyone born on Christmas Day is deemed to be committing blasphemy by competing with the birth of Jesus Christ and is therefore cursed to be a werewolf. Frustratingly, viewers have to wait until almost the end of the movie before we finally see Ollie as his full furry lupine alter ego, but it was worth the wait, because for 1961 the make-up was impressive, even though we never actually see a direct on-screen transformation like we do in subsequent werewolf classics such as The Howling, The Company of Wolves, etc etc. Instead, it's the 'looks away as a human, looks back again as a wolf' variety. Very enjoyable, nonetheless, but not remotely frightening – how our perceptions change over time.

British viewers may spot cameos from the likes of Michael Ripper (who seemed to be in every Hammer movie!), Warren 'Alf Garnett' Mitchell, Peter Sallis (from Last of the Summer Wine and also Nick Park's Wallace and Gromit animated series), and Desmond Llewelyn (subsequently Q from the James Bond film franchise). Click here to view an official trailer for The Curse of the Werewolf on YouTube.

 

 
Publicity poster for The Mitchells Vs The Machines (© Mike Rianda/Sony Pictures Animation/Lord Miller Productions/One Cool Films/Netflix – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

THE MITCHELLS VS THE MACHINES

Don't you just love truly trivial trivia? Here's an excellent example – the pattern on the socks of this movie's lead character Katie is the same as on the carpet at the Overlook Hotel in the classic 1980 horror movie The Shining. Anyway, back to this present one. Directed and co-written by Mike Rianda, and released by Netflix in 2021, The Mitchells Vs The Machines (but originally entitled Connected, btw) is a truly madcap, zany, yet thoroughly action-packed and entirely entertaining animated feature from Sony Pictures Animation and bought up by Netflix.

In it, America's most dysfunctional family, the Mitchells from Michigan, are taking teenage daughter Katie (voiced by Abbi Jacobson) to her California-based film school via a long cross-country road trip when they unexpectedly find themselves taking on a mass attack from rogue robots instead, which were originally created to serve as AI assistants but are now seeking world domination and total human subjugation.

Along the way, between all the battling, and apropos the impending robotic apocalypse, the Mitchells learn lessons in restraint, compromise, and family love & loyalty – themes not so much sprinkled surreptitiously through the plot as laid on thick and heavy with a very sizeable trowel! Nevertheless, The Mitchells Vs The Machines is a delight to watch, but with so much happening all the while, try not to blink or you'll miss at least three different subplots!

Nominated for an Academy Award as Best Animated Feature in 2022 (it lost to Disney's Encanto, but went on to scoop many other notable movie awards), this exceedingly animated animation movie includes a number of famous names voicing various of its characters, such as Danny McBride as father Rick Mitchell, Olivia Colman as the AI robots' egomaniacal leader PAL, singer John Legend as the Mitchells' neighbour Jim Posey, and its very own director Mike Rianda as the Mitchells' young son Aaron. Click here to view an official trailer for The Mitchells Vs The Machines on YouTube.

 

 
French publicity poster for Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile (© Will Speck/Josh Gordon/Columbia Pictures/Eagle Pictures/TSG Entertainment II/Sony Pictures Releasing – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

LYLE, LYLE, CROCODILE

Boxing Day movie #3 was the recent fantasy musical movie Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile. Directed by Will Speck and Josh Gordon, and released in 2022 by Sony Pictures, this delightful feel-good film is all about the adventures and misadventures of a singing (and dancing!) crocodile named Kyle, who after being abandoned by his original owner, struggling stage magician Hector P. Valenti (Javier Bardem), befriends a lonely, chronically anxious boy Josh Primm and his NYC family. Although he amazes and delights the Primms with his unique musical talent (just as he did with Valenti), Lyle is unable to show it off in public and become a star because tragically he suffers from crippling stage-fright.

Only in the privacy of the Primms' home can he shine, but even there his days of duetting with his adoptive human family seem numbered, thanks to the mean machinations of their obnoxious, obtrusive neighbor, the aptly-named Alistair Grumps, who firmly believes that Lyle's place is in a zoo, and intends to ensure that this is precisely where he is going to be placed, asap! But can the ever-loyal Primms prevail and a reappearing, prevaricating Valenti finally come good against the devious plans of grim Grumps?

All of the above, and so much more, is revealed as this magical movie's fantastical but often poignant plot unfurls, punctuated throughout by a foot-tapping recital of catchy songs, some old, some new, but all sung with winning panache by the very sweet, loveable Lyle – whose singing voice is supplied by none other than Canadian pop superstar Shawn Mendes. As for Lyle himself (who never actually speaks, he only sings) – he is an absolute marvel of CGI, both in bipedal and in quadrupedal mode. If Superman makes you believe a man can fly, then Lyle will convince you a crocodile can sing (and dance, don't forget)!

Based upon a couple of 1960s children's books by Bernard Waber (original illustrations from them are subtly incorporated as framed pictures on the stairway wall of the Primms' home in this movie), Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile is a thoroughly charming, heart-warming film, and was without doubt one of my Christmas 2022 movie-watch highlights. Click here to view an official trailer for Lyle, Lyle, Crocodile on YouTube, and click here to view the scene featuring Shawn Mendes (as Lyle) singing this movie's major new song, 'Top of the World'.

 

 
Publicity photograph depicting Max Frost and the Troopers performing on stage, from Wild In The Streets (© Barry Shear/American International Pictures – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

WILD IN THE STREETS

Conversely, "a thoroughly charming, heart-warming film" is certainly not a description that can be readily applied to my fourth and final Boxing Day movie choice, mesmerising though it was. Directed by Barry Shear, and released in 1968 by American International Pictures, Wild In The Streets is a fantasy/rebel cult movie inspired by a Robert Thom short story entitled 'The Day It All Happened, Baby!'.

It stars Christopher Jones (after folk singer Phil Ochs turned down the part) as disaffected but Svengali-like 22-year-old multi-millionaire US pop/rock singer Max Frost, who rallies his millions of fans nationwide into supporting him in his bid to coerce American politicians into reducing the voting age to 14. Eventually he succeeds, and after his minions lace the water supplies of Washington DC to sabotage the actions of older politicians, he is then voted into power as President.

Ruthlessly capitalizing upon this epochal event in American history, Frost swiftly instigates the establishment of concentration-camp-like detention centres all over the US where every American citizen aged 35 or over is transported and confined there for the rest of their lives, drugged to the hilt on LSD. All very deranged and dystopian, a counterculture confection that may not be to everyone's taste, but it makes compelling viewing nonetheless, with Shelley Winters in particular giving an eerie but potent tour de force performance as Frost's unhinged mother. Also worthy of note is a young Richard Pryor playing Stanley X, the drummer in Frost's band, The Troopers.

Shot in just 15 days, Wild In The Streets is a strange and unsettling but well-sustained movie, never losing pace or palling in interest throughout its 97-min running time. Click here to view an official trailer for Wild In The Streets on YouTube, and here for the official video of the song 'The Shape of Things to Come' as performed by Max Frost and the Troopers in the movie, but by session singers in reality and also released as a single that reached #22 in the US singles charts.

To view a complete chronological listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.

 

Thursday, January 5, 2023

MOOSE THE MOVIE

 
Atmospheric image of the Moose Man rising up from the depths of the local river at midnight following his release from the Underworld (© G. Logan Dellinger/Sons of Winter Productions – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)

My first movie watch of 2023, viewed by me on 3 January, was Moose The Movie, which I'd wanted to see for a very long time and was kindly made possible for me to do so now by my friend Jane Cooper - thanks Jane! (Incidentally, I'm still hoping to obtain its DVD release one day for my own collection, if I can ever track it down.)

Directed by G. Logan Dellinger, written by acclaimed Alaskan comic artist brothers Chad and Darin Carpenter (Chad created the extremely successful and self-syndicated daily comic panel strip Tundra), released in 2015 by Sons of Winter Productions, and filmed entirely in Alaska, this exceedingly offbeat comedy/horror/monster feature is all about a murderous supernatural entity called the Moose Man, combining a human body with the antlered head of a ferocious fanged moose – and thus dubbed a moosetaur by some of this film's characters.

After two lame-brained paint-ballers inadvertently release him from the Underworld where he'd been incarcerated for the past two centuries by the area's Native American Nation following his remorseless attacks upon them for many years, MM goes on a seemingly unstoppable rampage of slaughter amid the woodlands around the quaintly-named Alaskan backswoods town of Gangrene Gulch. Here, the inhabitants are not so much teetering on the brink of insanity as plunging headlong into its deepest darkest depths!

These 'good folk' include (but are by no means limited to!): an ultra-violent narcoleptic with a lethal talent for hurling dangerously sharp objects at anyone close by whenever she abruptly falls asleep; a greasy-spoon café waiter and cook who both happen to be hand puppets operated by a weird mute guy whose bald head, ferocious eyebrows, and wild staring eyes are the only portions of him visible above the table under which he hides himself;  the local mayor who never feels insulted if called a chicken, because that's exactly what she is, a clucking chicken!*; and a diminutive but hyper-aggressive tin-hat wearer who unshakeably believes that everything happening in the town is due to aliens.

All of this mayhem and much, much more confront newly-arrived and thoroughly-bemused deputy park ranger Zack (played by Zack Lanphier), whereas his senior partner, Mike (Dave Nufer), as a longstanding Gangrene Gulch resident, is entirely unfazed by it all. Indeed, the one and only plus in this sack-load of minuses as far as Zack is concerned is the coroner's assistant, Samantha (Chantel Grover), whom he finds very easy on the eye, but is so tongue-tied and witless whenever he is in her presence that he helplessly (and hilariously) commits more Freudian slips than an Austrian psychologist walking along a pavement covered in banana skins!

Pendulum-swinging between darkly surreal and starkly silly as Zack and company  desperately seek to pit their wits (such that these are!) against the savage fury of their antlered antagonist, Moose The Movie is one of the funniest films that I've seen for quite a while, and is seriously enjoyable, as long as you're not expecting any marginally sophisticated humour or anything even remotely suggestive of CGI effects, that is. Low on budget (much of it came from a Kickstarter campaign) but high on laughs, cheap and cheerful(ly macabre) is the phrase that comes to mind!

But don't take my word for it – click here and here to check out a couple of official trailers for Moose The Movie on YouTube, and see for yourself.

(* = The scenes at Gangrene Gulch were filmed in the real Alaskan town of Wassila, where a certain former US Vice-Presidential candidate, as opposed to a chicken, once served as mayor – remember Sarah Palin?)

To view a complete chronological listing of all of my Shuker In MovieLand blog's other film reviews and articles (each one instantly accessible via a direct clickable link), please click HERE, and please click HERE to view a complete fully-clickable alphabetical listing of them.

 
The official DVD of Moose the Movie (© G. Logan Dellinger/Sons of Winter Productions – reproduced here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review purposes only)