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Cancer survivor Emily (Sophie Thurling) and her friends Kyle (Lucas
Pittaway), Brad (Daniel Facciolo), Nina (Lorin Kauffeld), Dave (Martin
Astifo) and Chad (Sunny S. Walia) have rented a house in the country over
the weekend to party hard ... to run into a conflict with the locals even
before they get to the place. And it goes downhill from there, the owner
of the house (Andy McPhee) and the caretaker (Daniel Reader) don't like
them very much and have occasional violent outbursts, without knowing our
youngsters have taken a briefcase of cocaine with them and it's
"rightful owner" wants it back and hopes he can torture it out
of our heroes, then there's a killer on the loose who eventually kills
Chad, and the killer could be one of them. Then there's the village leader
(Roger Ward), who really isn't into outsiders, especially when they have
drug parties, and thus wants to punish them. But that's all peanuts
compared to the fact that the house our heroes are staying it is haunted
by the "Faceless Man" (Brendan Bacon), a demon who has a weird
predilection for Emily ...
So ok, The Faceless Man isn't exactly the reinvention
of the horror genre - but it's sooo much fun for this very reason, as it
mixes elements from various subgenres - from slasher to haunted house to
backwoods terror with a hint of gangster movie - to a intentionally pulpy
and highly explosive mix where you can always expect the unexpected and
where the only thing that's for sure is that things might blow up at any
minute. This is of course also supported by a very dynamic directorial
effort that doesn't shy away from blood and guts, and a very able cast,
and one can't shake the feeling that everybody involved had a bloody good
time making this wild movie, something that's really infectuous. And the
result is of course very enjoyable genre fun.
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