Bad editing, rushed dialogue, poor grafx. I'm a huge fan on the genre but this plays out like a cosplay fan flick that went from vlogs to no-earning investment.
Plot summary
Set in the future. The world has been split into sectors, humans have captured deviants and force them to fight to the death. Madman Dominion Harvey (Eric Roberts) hosts the Immortal Wars and televises the show to the entire planet. Trikalypse and fellow deviants will not only fight to survive, but to bring down Dominion Industries.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
Terribly executed.
Aw c'mon, please!
Did anyone bother to write a script? did they just throw a bunch of out-takes into a computer and add badly filtered graphics... look, whatever, I don't care. If this is the film makers legacy then obviously neither do they. The ONLY reward this piece of dross gave me was allowing me to press STOP.
But in the back of my mind I walk away wondering what Eric Roberts thought when he said yes to this... it's not good.
Nifty sci-fi film
In a bleak future humans force mutants known as deviants to participate in a brutal televised show in which they fight each other to the death. It's up to the mutants to stand up to their cruel human oppressors.
Writer/director Joe Lujan relates the engrossing and enjoyable story at a constant pace, offers a vivid depiction of a grim futuristic society, maintains a tough gritty tone throughout, and stages the exciting fight scenes with skill and aplomb. Moreover, the severe emotional toll th fighting takes on its participants gives this movie an extra substantial emotional wallop. Eric Roberts portrays evil mastermind Dominion Harvey with deliciously wicked lip-smacking wicked relish. Moreover, there are fine contributions from Jackie Gerhardy as the tender Trikalypse, Taylor Kilgore as the perky Iro, Lindsay Cruz as the ruthless Dekay, Tom Sizemore as the angry Bloodshed, Christian Larson as the resigned The Charge, Mark Justice as the lethal Blackout, and Tori Imlach as cocky champion Nyx Moros. July Castillo's sharp widescreen cinematography provides an appropriately dark and moody look. Eric Dyer's pumping score hits the stirring spot. A cool flick.