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Movie Review: ‘Kill Command’

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The first thing you notice about “Kill Command” is that it’s got a high-gloss above average budget. Which is surprising because I hadn’t heard of this film until it appeared on my Netflix list as “recently added.”

Usually a sci-ci or horror film that appears in that section can be hit-or-miss, and thankfully Steven Gomez’s robots run amok film is a true hit.

Kill Command is a tense and entertaining sci-fi film.

At first it looks like a futuristic dystopian society genre entry but quickly evolves into a man versus machine standoff with large mechanical robots which move like metallic centaurs. But these beasts have built-in weapons.

Kathrine Mills (Vanessa Kirby) is a cyborg who works for the Harbinger Corporation and she does her job well. She’s connected to everything in the mainframe and notices that some of the robots contained therein are malfunctioning.

She tasked with joining a training force headed to Harbinger 1, a tactical facility, to partake in war games, but also to see what is making the army of mechanical soldiers fail to work properly.

However, upon arrival they notice that communications have been severed from headquarters and they are greeted with hovering drones which seem to be gathering recognizance and sending that data to another source.

That source is a S.A.R. (Study Analyze Reprogram) unit which stands more than twelve feet tall, complete with a glowing blue optical faceplate and armed with a blow torch and vice-grip appendage.

The S.A.R also has quite a number of minions which are basically walking 50-caliber machine guns with crab-like legs.

Trapped and confused about the sudden rogue nature of the bots, the team decides to take matters into their own hands and eliminate the metallic menaces all under the watchful eye of Mills who has been locked-out of command functions due to an “error.”

“Kill Command” is a very entertaining sci-ci action picture. The plot has all the similar workings of other hub survival movies, but the style and detail director Gomez puts into this film could rival even the most mainstream blockbuster.

There are a few silent hiccups in the CGI work, but nothing blaring and the mother S.A.R is a movie villain reminiscent of the queen in Aliens.

Special effects team Luke Corbyn and Steve Paton went more practical than pixel and the result is astounding.

The last quarter of the film is tense and throttled with a few surprises. It sets up nicely for a sequel and honestly if it is anything like it’s predecessor, I’d gladly forgo the “recently added” section of my Netflix queue and join the one at my Cineplex instead.

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Movies

PG-13 Rated ‘Tarot’ Underperforms at the Box Office

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Tarot starts off the summer horror box office season with a whimper. Scary movies like these are usually a fall offering so why Sony decided to make Tarot a summer contender is questionable. Since Sony uses Netflix as their VOD platform now maybe people are waiting to stream it for free even though both critic and audience scores were very low, a death sentence to a theatrical release. 

Although it was a fast death — the movie brought in $6.5 million domestically and an additional $3.7 million globally, enough to recoup its budget — word of mouth might have been enough to convince moviegoers to make their popcorn at home for this one. 

Tarot

Another factor in its demise might be its MPAA rating; PG-13. Moderate fans of horror can handle fare that falls under this rating, but hardcore viewers who fuel the box office in this genre, prefer an R. Anything less rarely does well unless James Wan is at the helm or that infrequent occurrence like The Ring. It might be because the PG-13 viewer will wait for streaming while an R generates enough interest to open a weekend.

And let’s not forget that Tarot might just be bad. Nothing offends a horror fan quicker than a shopworn trope unless it’s a new take. But some genre YouTube critics say Tarot suffers from boilerplate syndrome; taking a basic premise and recycling it hoping people won’t notice.

But all is not lost, 2024 has a lot more horror movie offerings coming this summer. In the coming months, we will get Cuckoo (April 8), Longlegs (July 12), A Quiet Place: Part One (June 28), and the new M. Night Shyamalan thriller Trap (August 9).

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Movies

‘Abigail’ Dances Her Way To Digital This Week

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Abigail is sinking her teeth into digital rental this week. Starting on May 7, you can own this, the latest movie from Radio Silence. Directors Bettinelli-Olpin & Tyler Gillet elevate the vampire genre challenging expectations at every blood-stained corner.

The film stars Melissa Barrera (Scream VIIn The Heights), Kathryn Newton (Ant-Man and the Wasp: QuantumaniaFreakyLisa Frankenstein), and Alisha Weir as the titular character.

The film currently sits at number nine at the domestic box office and has an audience score of 85%. Many have compared the film thematically to Radio Silence’s 2019 home invasion movie Ready or Not: A heist team is hired by a mysterious fixer to kidnap the daughter of a powerful underworld figure. They must guard the 12-year-old ballerina for one night to net a $50 million ransom. As the captors start to dwindle one by one, they discover to their mounting terror that they’re locked inside an isolated mansion with no ordinary little girl.”

Radio Silence is said to be switching gears from horror to comedy in their next project. Deadline reports that the team will be helming an Andy Samberg comedy about robots.

Abigail will be available to rent or own on digital starting May 7.

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Editorial

Yay or Nay: What’s Good and Bad in Horror This Week

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Horror Movies

Welcome to Yay or Nay a weekly mini post about what I think is good and bad news in the horror community written in bite-sized chunks. 

Yay:

Mike Flanagan talking about directing the next chapter in the Exorcist trilogy. That might mean he saw the last one and realized there were two left and if he does anything well it’s draw out a story. 

Yay:

To the announcement of a new IP-based film Mickey Vs Winnie. It’s fun to read comical hot takes from people who haven’t even seen the movie yet.

Nay:

The new Faces of Death reboot gets an R rating. It’s not really fair — Gen-Z should get an unrated version like past generations so they can question their mortality the same as the rest of us did. 

Yay:

Russell Crowe is doing another possession movie. He’s quickly becoming another Nic Cage by saying yes to every script, bringing the magic back to B-movies, and more money into VOD. 

Nay:

Putting The Crow back in theaters for its 30th anniversary. Re-releasing classic movies at the cinema to celebrate a milestone is perfectly fine, but doing so when the lead actor in that film was killed on set due to neglect is a cash grab of the worst kind. 

The Crow
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