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Corporate Cutthroat Massacre
USA 2009
produced by Nikki Wall, Creep Creepersin, Elina Madison (executive) for Lillylove Productions, Creepersin Films
directed by Creep Creepersin
starring Elina Madison, Charlie Vaughn, Chandler Maness, Robbyn Leigh, Tabitha Taylor, Derek DuChesne, Sunny Doench, Stephanie Jackson, Dudley Beene, Frankie Ray, Sean Mesler, Raye Robertson, Elissa Dowling
screenplay by Creep Creepersin, Elina Madison, Tyger Torrez, based on The Late Shift by Tyger Torrez, Elina Madison, music by Kenneth Hampton, special effects makeup by Tara Lang
review by Mike Haberfelner
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Available on DVD! To buy, click on link(s) below and help keep this site afloat (commissions earned) |
Always make sure of DVD-compatibility!!!
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Brandi Babcock (Elina Madison) just loves to be the tough-as-nails
boss, who expects perfection from everyone, perfection to the very
standard she believes herself at. Sure, she's addicted to all sorts of
prescription drugs, but in her mind, that's not a contradiction. Now
Brandi has to fire two of her employees, and to determine whom to fire,
she lets everyone work through the night, first and foremost probably to
satisfy her sadistic urges. Brandi's employees are pissed of course,
because the late shift messes up their private lives and because they know
they won't get their assignment done that night anyhow, so instead of
doing their work, some (Chandler Maness, Robbyn Leigh) take to fucking in
the copy room while others (Charlie Vaughn, Sunny Doench) take to heavy
boozing or ordering strippers, while yet others just plan to sit it out
and remain the last ones standing. What none of them know though:
There's a killer in the house, slaughtering all of them one by one, until
only Brandi and the janitor (Frankie Ray) are left standing ... Click
here to open the Spoiler Pop-up! Now this is a fun film that takes
the tried-and-true slasher formula and puts it into the context of a
typical (intentionally clichéed) office enviroment - and it's all done
via comedy ... of the satirical, not the gross-out variety. Add to this a
very elegant and subtle direction and a cast that's up to the comedic
requirements of the movie, and you got yourself one pretty entertaining
little film ...
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