Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen a contaminated energy drink turns an illegal rave into a nightmare, a germaphobic journalist has to overcome her deepest fears to get her friends out alive.When a contaminated energy drink turns an illegal rave into a nightmare, a germaphobic journalist has to overcome her deepest fears to get her friends out alive.When a contaminated energy drink turns an illegal rave into a nightmare, a germaphobic journalist has to overcome her deepest fears to get her friends out alive.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Marsha Vassilevskaia
- Jen
- (as Maria Volk)
David Bhagwan Singh
- New Reporter
- (as David Singh)
Avis à la une
At least the people in the film had drugs & drink to get them through the awful plot. I had to do it sober.
The fact that I chose to turn this off & we're in lockdown, (so stuck indoors & bored out of our minds) should be evidence as to how boring this film was.
Now imagine a rave party, drugs and ravers turning into mutants
..... hahaha.
This is what this film is about.
I loved it. Super original. You need to love b grade style horror, if not you will hate this film.
The special effects are on point. The music is great, story line super original.
I want more more more....
This is what this film is about.
I loved it. Super original. You need to love b grade style horror, if not you will hate this film.
The special effects are on point. The music is great, story line super original.
I want more more more....
Apart from the fact that I recognised one of the actors in 'Ravers' as an Englishman I'd recently seen in another movie, I had a sneaking suspicion that one or two of the cast weren't natural born Americans. In fact, I think most were born and bred in jolly ol' England and were doing their best impression of Yosemite Sam for ninety minutes - all the while being chased by zombie-like creatures.
Naturally, it's hard for your average British actor (and, trust me, the cast here is VERY average!) to pretend to be scared to death while fighting for their lives while putting on a convincing New York accent. I freely admit I couldn't do it. But nor can they. In fact, I'd love to know the reason they didn't just set the film in Britain and be done with it. It's constantly hinted that it's set in the States, but I have no idea why.
A journalist with a phobia of germs goes to an illegal rave to get a scoop and gets more than she bargained with when a dodgy energy drink makes half the venue turn into zombies. Now she and a handful of others have to fight to get out (the exits are all locked - for some reason). A pretty standard plot to a zombie B-movie, but the problem comes with the monsters themselves. The script even points out that they're - technically - not zombies. And they're definitely not. These creatures can be spooked, shouted down and generally tricked into not eating or attacking people. And - best still for our human protagonists - they can even be made to attack each other - a very handy plot-point whenever the writers needed the humans to get away safely.
As much as it has its flaws, I didn't hate the film. It was decent enough, but there wasn't much here that I haven't seen before - and better. I didn't really care about many of the characters and the fact they were all trying to do accents made them even harder to relate to. If you really need another zombie fix then there's enough here for you to enjoy. It had some nice make-up effects here and there (the burnt skinless zombie at the end was well done!), but if you're looking for a colourful mock zombie flick where people are stuck in a building, try 'Demons' from way back in 1985. Oh, and don't get your hopes up that Natasha Henstridge is in it much. She has about three minutes of screen time, tops.
Naturally, it's hard for your average British actor (and, trust me, the cast here is VERY average!) to pretend to be scared to death while fighting for their lives while putting on a convincing New York accent. I freely admit I couldn't do it. But nor can they. In fact, I'd love to know the reason they didn't just set the film in Britain and be done with it. It's constantly hinted that it's set in the States, but I have no idea why.
A journalist with a phobia of germs goes to an illegal rave to get a scoop and gets more than she bargained with when a dodgy energy drink makes half the venue turn into zombies. Now she and a handful of others have to fight to get out (the exits are all locked - for some reason). A pretty standard plot to a zombie B-movie, but the problem comes with the monsters themselves. The script even points out that they're - technically - not zombies. And they're definitely not. These creatures can be spooked, shouted down and generally tricked into not eating or attacking people. And - best still for our human protagonists - they can even be made to attack each other - a very handy plot-point whenever the writers needed the humans to get away safely.
As much as it has its flaws, I didn't hate the film. It was decent enough, but there wasn't much here that I haven't seen before - and better. I didn't really care about many of the characters and the fact they were all trying to do accents made them even harder to relate to. If you really need another zombie fix then there's enough here for you to enjoy. It had some nice make-up effects here and there (the burnt skinless zombie at the end was well done!), but if you're looking for a colourful mock zombie flick where people are stuck in a building, try 'Demons' from way back in 1985. Oh, and don't get your hopes up that Natasha Henstridge is in it much. She has about three minutes of screen time, tops.
Oh man I could not take this one. Such complete garbage I got sick of it with still 52 minutes left.... Unbelievable the pure dung they make these days. 1/10
Normally I would have given this Kind of movie a 6. Good horror but some poor writing choises. But because it all played out during a rave party, with the kind of music I really like, I had to give an 8. I had the volume pumped up really hard and it felt like I was there. Awesome!
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- How long is Ravers?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39:1
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