4 reviews
The premise of Cult Hero is interesting and I knew what I was getting myself into. A comedy with blood that has something to say but always by way of parody. The film has its interest and I understand that it works better for an American audience (or accompanied by an American audience), but it is a concept too exaggerated and too pathetic to be able to maintain interest for 90 minutes.
I believe it could generate several memes and even gain a small cult following in year's to come, but it's a tiresome idea and such idiocy could have worked fantastically in a short film, but it doesn't have the legs for a long feature.
I believe it could generate several memes and even gain a small cult following in year's to come, but it's a tiresome idea and such idiocy could have worked fantastically in a short film, but it doesn't have the legs for a long feature.
- PedroPires90
- Oct 8, 2022
- Permalink
Treat yourself - go in blind and enjoy. Saw this at Fantasia and Cult Hero was made by a small group of very passionate people who truly understand story telling and are not afraid of authenticity & showing their Canadian roots. Ry gave a performance of a lifetime, brilliant comedic timing, and perhaps the definitive on screen portrayal of a Karen by Liv Collins. Some of the best special effects I've seen outside of a Tom Savini flick, stuck around for the Q&A and the effects genius behind the blood and fun is a true master. We will ascend!
- witchsbrew82
- Jul 30, 2022
- Permalink
Years after a personal tragedy, a disgraced cult-buster sees an opportunity to revive his career when a woman requires his services to get her husband out of a dangerous cult he unknowingly joined and can't escape from, forcing him to utilize his old skill-set to get him out and bring down the cult.
This was a pretty solid and enjoyable genre outing. One of the better features here is the rather fun atmosphere that comes about throughout here. The initial look at the scandal that affected his show by inadvertently causing the mass suicide of the members he was supposed to save is a fine way to get this going with a goofy 80s-styled Action hero at the forefront of the film. This is just as much fun as the early work here setting up his return by focusing on the covertness of the cult's front and how they manage to go about operating without being detected with the blinding tranquility and duplicitous brainwashing that goes on at the facility. Coupled with the series of revelations about the cult's purpose and how they exist, the whole thing is quite fun and well-handled. That goes along nicely with the action scenes here battling the cult's members trying to stop their dangerous plans. The first confrontation in her home where she's unaware of their purpose for being there until it's too late and requires the busters' help to save her gives this a decent enough start with some fun stalking as well as a nice resolution. Another brawl with cult members in the hideout serves this one nicely enough, and the big finale here offers a bigger sense of action involving the twist capture of what they're intending with the ceremony and how they're doing it. The back-and-forth battles that emerge in this section trying to keep control of the situation as the cult tries to ensure the ceremony goes off while they try to stop them have some nice action and gore here which all makes for a fun enough time with this one. There are some flaws to be had here. One of the biggest detriments to be had here comes from the stilted pacing that comes about trying to build up a credible threat to the cult. Focusing on the subplots involving the rivalry at the realtor's company, the disgraced show host looking to reclaim his past glory or the cult's secret operations serves this one incredibly well to get the plot points sorted out but also manages to keep the cult activity, and by proxy, a lot of the horror elements off-screen for a large portion of the early half here. That can make for a somewhat difficult time getting into this one, much like the cult-buster himself who's a bit of a wildcard that's so over-the-top he can be a bit much to take, all of which result in bringing this one down.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Language and Graphic Violence.
This was a pretty solid and enjoyable genre outing. One of the better features here is the rather fun atmosphere that comes about throughout here. The initial look at the scandal that affected his show by inadvertently causing the mass suicide of the members he was supposed to save is a fine way to get this going with a goofy 80s-styled Action hero at the forefront of the film. This is just as much fun as the early work here setting up his return by focusing on the covertness of the cult's front and how they manage to go about operating without being detected with the blinding tranquility and duplicitous brainwashing that goes on at the facility. Coupled with the series of revelations about the cult's purpose and how they exist, the whole thing is quite fun and well-handled. That goes along nicely with the action scenes here battling the cult's members trying to stop their dangerous plans. The first confrontation in her home where she's unaware of their purpose for being there until it's too late and requires the busters' help to save her gives this a decent enough start with some fun stalking as well as a nice resolution. Another brawl with cult members in the hideout serves this one nicely enough, and the big finale here offers a bigger sense of action involving the twist capture of what they're intending with the ceremony and how they're doing it. The back-and-forth battles that emerge in this section trying to keep control of the situation as the cult tries to ensure the ceremony goes off while they try to stop them have some nice action and gore here which all makes for a fun enough time with this one. There are some flaws to be had here. One of the biggest detriments to be had here comes from the stilted pacing that comes about trying to build up a credible threat to the cult. Focusing on the subplots involving the rivalry at the realtor's company, the disgraced show host looking to reclaim his past glory or the cult's secret operations serves this one incredibly well to get the plot points sorted out but also manages to keep the cult activity, and by proxy, a lot of the horror elements off-screen for a large portion of the early half here. That can make for a somewhat difficult time getting into this one, much like the cult-buster himself who's a bit of a wildcard that's so over-the-top he can be a bit much to take, all of which result in bringing this one down.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Language and Graphic Violence.
- kannibalcorpsegrinder
- Aug 1, 2022
- Permalink
This film is absolutely incredible! The concept is brilliant, the execution is hysterical, but most importantly, the characters are lovable.
Ryan Barrett's electrifying performance as Dale Domazar balanced beautifully with Liv Collins' hysterical "Karen-esque" performance as Kallie Jones. My favourite sequence was the duo's face-off with "Mr. Mort" (Matt Griffin). It had me crying.
Shout out to the DP, Mr. MacLaughlin, the film is stunning to look at. Bravo to the entire cast and crew.
The film as a whole does an amazing job of taking the concept of a death cult and making it a dark comedy.
I cannot wait to see what Collingwood Film Company does next.
Ryan Barrett's electrifying performance as Dale Domazar balanced beautifully with Liv Collins' hysterical "Karen-esque" performance as Kallie Jones. My favourite sequence was the duo's face-off with "Mr. Mort" (Matt Griffin). It had me crying.
Shout out to the DP, Mr. MacLaughlin, the film is stunning to look at. Bravo to the entire cast and crew.
The film as a whole does an amazing job of taking the concept of a death cult and making it a dark comedy.
I cannot wait to see what Collingwood Film Company does next.
- mikestechpro
- May 7, 2023
- Permalink