Only if you love slashers you're going to find some substance watching this movie. It has several nice deaths and the setting is pretty cool. On the other hand weak script, acting and storyline. So, overall just an OK b type slasher.
Open 24 Hours
2018
Action / Horror
Open 24 Hours
2018
Action / Horror
Plot summary
A young girl gets a graveyard shift at a gas station situated in the middle of nowhere. She tells her boss that she has done time in prison for burning her serial killer boyfriend who survived the burns but is now incarcerated. However she doesn't mention to the boss or her parole officer about the paranoid delusions that she recently has started suffering from. Things go from weird to downright complicated on the very first night on the graveyard shift as the line between reality and illusions blur.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB 1080p.WEBMovie Reviews
Just an Ok slasher for fans
Watch me Mary
Mary is out of prison on parole. On a good day, she is just paranoid delusional. Her boyfriend was a serial killer and she would watch him kill people. Then she set fire to him. Mary (Vanessa Grasse ) manages to score a job on the night shift at the rural Deer Gas Market. There are locals who object to Mary being free. Things do go well on her first night or else there wouldn't be a movie.
This is a mediocre slasher with bright red blood. We can typically tell when Mary sees things and that which is real.
Guide: F-word. No sex or nudity.
A rough first night working the graveyard shift
Traumatized Mary White (a strong and sympathetic performance by Vanessa Grasse) does a stint in prison in the wake of setting her serial killer boyfriend James (a creepy portrayal by Cole Vigue) on fire. After being released from said prison, Mary lands a job working the night shift at a remote gas station only to have her paranoia get the best of her. Or has James really returned to pay her a visit?
Writer/director Padraig Reynolds relates the enjoyable and engrossing story at a steady pace, generates a good deal of tension, takes time to develop the fragile and vulnerable, yet still resilient and personable lead character, and makes fine use of the confined and claustrophobic main location. The moments of brutal violence pack a savage punch. The sturdy acting by the able cast keeps this movie humming: Brendon Fletcher as the easygoing Bobby, Emily Tennant as loyal and concerned gal pal Debbie, Daniel O'Heara as hard-nosed parole officer Tom Doogan, Tomi May as a crude trucker, and Glen Hobgood as amiable owner Ed. Holly Amber Church's spirited shivery score hits the shuddery spot. The slick cinematography by David Matthews provides a pleasing polished look. Only the frustratingly vague ending leaves something to be desired. A solid scarefest.