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Toe Tags
USA 2003
produced by Marc Page, Robb Vanskike, Darla Enlow (executive) for Next Monkey Productions
directed by Darla Enlow
starring Darla Enlow, Marc Page, Larry Scott, Andrew Lombardo, Judy Charles, Scott Killman, Dru Callis, Alicia Jenkins, Ted Scott, Danielle Britton, Ryan Cole, Deseree Cook, Erin McCormick, Jeff Crain, Dana Pike, Robert Snow, Tammy Jackson, Lee Redick, Brandon Crain, John Overbey, Brian Crain, Ranae Cooper, Robb Vanskike, Shirley Enlow, Daniel Stoons, Kristin Page, Mark Wyzard, Luke Wyzard, Kyle Wyzard, Jake Wyzard, Steve Law, David Whipple
written by John Overbey, music by Sheldon Clark, Darla Enlow
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) |
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Someone is killing off the tenants of an apartment complex, and cops
Kate (Darla Enlow) and Mark (Marc Page) are investigating - and soon find
out that they themselves can be linked to some of the victims, might they
be past lovers or whatever else. Kate soon comes up with a chief suspect,
Ms Geiler (Judy Charles), landlady of the complex, but nobody believes
that this admittedly weird elderly woman could commit such savage murders.
Instead, more and more points to Kate herself being the killer, including
the fact that she stole the toetags of all the victims in the case, which
is even documented on camera. Captain Blake (Larry Scott) wants to have
her arrested in a spectacular manner to please the press, yet Mark
convinces his boss to let him handle it his own way, after all, Kate is
his partner. Back at the building complex, Mark finds Kate leaning over
yet another victim - and suddenly she is stabbed to death by Ms Geiler,
who has been the killer of the story after all. Yet Mark sees to it that
the now dead Kate gets the blame for everything, because Ms Geiler is his
mother. No explanation is given why Kate has been stealing the titular
toe tags ... Part slasher, part cop movie of the buddy-variety,
this film actually has very little to offer in terms of originality,
instead fills it plot up with clichés from either genre until it loses
itself in a surprise ending. At least the camerawork in this film seems
ambitious, but unfortunately it's not supported by the film's story. Not
very good, though admittedly I have seen (way) worse.
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review © by Mike Haberfelner
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Robots and rats,
demons and potholes, cuddly toys and shopping mall Santas,
love and death and everything in between,
Tales to Chill Your Bones to is all of that.
Tales to Chill Your Bones to -
a collection of short stories and mini-plays ranging from the horrific to the darkly humourous,
from the post-apocalyptic to the weirdly romantic,
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all thought up by the twisted mind of screenwriter and film reviewer Michael Haberfelner.
Tales to Chill Your Bones to
the new anthology by Michael Haberfelner
Out now from Amazon!!! |
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