When abducted by a psychopath, a husband is taken on a ride from hell where he is subjected to three horrific tales of terror while his family is held captive in an attached cargo trailer.When abducted by a psychopath, a husband is taken on a ride from hell where he is subjected to three horrific tales of terror while his family is held captive in an attached cargo trailer.When abducted by a psychopath, a husband is taken on a ride from hell where he is subjected to three horrific tales of terror while his family is held captive in an attached cargo trailer.
Greg Farinelli
- Video Store Customer (segment "Radical Video")
- (as Gregory Farinelli)
Joshua R. Outzen
- Grocery Delivery Guy (segment "By Proxy")
- (as Josh Outzen)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I wish i could have rated it lower. I love B movies and I love 80's horror. This was neither. It wasn't even in the same ballpark. The video rental was the best of the worse but whole movie waste of time. I always take.1 star ratings with a grain of salt. To each their own. I wish I would have listened this time. They were right! I get what it was trying to be, it just never quite made it. ☹
I saw the cover while scrolling on my tv and thought this might be good to watch because I love anthologies and boy was I mistaking. I can't believe I wasted time watching this...
The acting was horrendous although I will give some kudos to the special effects makeup and the stories weren't that bad, but the acting and over acting was cringe..I've seen better student films and Youtube shorts that were way better then this. I'm sure it was a budget thing and resources but this could've been better. Maybe if Blumhouse got ahold of this and did a remake and made it better with better actors it might be worth a watch.
I have watched and reviewed some horrible film from Prime Video, but this one has to be the absolute ROCK BOTTOM!!! The stories are boring and contrived with no coherence whatsoever....and I don't mean among them as a whole, but within each individual "tale."
To say that I loathe them all would be right on the mark, but I especially hold the first one in utter contempt. Th story made no sense even for a moment, the casting was a disaster. The lead character which was a female author with a young child and was played by a haggard old actress (born 1947) with massive make-up who did not have enough talent to be a supporting actress in a kindergarten Christmas Pageant, she was RANCID as well as being better suited to play the child's GRANDMOTHER! Plus, the costume for the demon involved was laughable as were the special effects involved in his role!
The other two stories were bad, but not quite as nauseating and senseless as the first. The scenario binding the tales together was out of place altogether and added NOTHING to the movies.
If you meet this movie in a dark alley RUN FOR YOUR LIFE to avoid it!!!!!
The other two stories were bad, but not quite as nauseating and senseless as the first. The scenario binding the tales together was out of place altogether and added NOTHING to the movies.
If you meet this movie in a dark alley RUN FOR YOUR LIFE to avoid it!!!!!
Apparently Terror Tales has some actors from well-known 80's slashers (Sleepaway Camp, My Bloody Valentine, etc.). If that's enough for you then you'll be thrilled with this. If you're looking for a bit more, however, then you might want to give it a pass. What was so frustrating to me was that I could see so many ways that it could have been improved. Even in spite of the generally low acting effort.
The Wrap-Around: I did like the guy playing the Driver. He was a bit over the top but it fit his character. The wrap-around was ok, I guess. It seemed very loosely put together as an excuse for the stories. Which leads us into the stories themselves...
Tale Two: Radical Video: By far the strongest segment it was the only time in the movie that felt like an intentional homage to the eighties era slasher movies. The main couple had some good chemistry and you can tell they put effort into evoking the rental store. It made me miss them very much. Streaming may be more convenient but it doesn't have that feel of the rental stores. It also has a throwback to the eighties cop: Drunk, widower and surrounded by lots of jazz. My biggest problem with this segment is the actions of the people make sense...until the end. Then everyone decides to say "What's survival called again?" The kill scenes were obviously dolls and badly done. This was frustrating as a simple shift in camera angle could have fixed this problem and made it look so much better.
Tale Three: Epidemic: I did not like this segment at all. It was very bland and the acting effort put in was downright abysmal. I will say, however, that there was some pretty neat imagery in it such as the cross pendant dangling from a gun and a crucifix being welded into a woman's neck. Yan Birch would have been great as Satan but is so over-the-top it's hard to take him seriously. When he isn't hamming it up he looks genuinely scary.
The wrap-around finishes up after the last story. I won't spoil it for you, however. I didn't care for the final denouement because it just didn't seem to fit. I could think of a better way for it to have ended that would have been just as good and just as gory and more apropos to the irony factor.
My main issues were with the lighting, generally poor acting quality and bland cinematography. The special effects were ok in some spots but in others they were terrible. The gunshots in particular. What was more frustrating was that in a lot of the scenes just shifting the camera angle or toning down the lighting would have helped immensely. If it's an early movie by all of the crew involved I could be more forgiving. What I do have a harder time being more lenient with is their insistence on framing every evil person as being highly interested in the horror genre. If you know me and have been around Sci-Fi & Scary for awhile you'll know what's coming. If not, buckle up....
It's hard enough for the horror community to be taken seriously as literature. It's consistently ignored by the mainstream, non-genre oriented awards. Same with horror movies. It's rare that a horror author makes it to any kind of bestseller book lists (i.e. the New York Times bestseller list) unless it's an author with a lot of clout (*cough*Stephen King*cough*). Movies don't fare much better when it comes to Oscar noms and whatnot. What I cannot and will not comprehend is why a movie set firmly in that genre, starring people from that genre, would frame every horror aficionado in the movie as mentally ill, psychotic, and murderous. Thanks. Just thank you so much for that. It's at the point where a lot of horror authors/filmmakers won't even identify themselves as 'horror authors' because it's perceived as a negative connotation. From observation it seems like 'speculative fiction' or 'dark fantasy'. No, if that's how they truly see their work, that's fine. It's their prerogative. But it feels as though it's more of a marketing strategy because horror is a dirty word.
The Wrap-Around: I did like the guy playing the Driver. He was a bit over the top but it fit his character. The wrap-around was ok, I guess. It seemed very loosely put together as an excuse for the stories. Which leads us into the stories themselves...
Tale Two: Radical Video: By far the strongest segment it was the only time in the movie that felt like an intentional homage to the eighties era slasher movies. The main couple had some good chemistry and you can tell they put effort into evoking the rental store. It made me miss them very much. Streaming may be more convenient but it doesn't have that feel of the rental stores. It also has a throwback to the eighties cop: Drunk, widower and surrounded by lots of jazz. My biggest problem with this segment is the actions of the people make sense...until the end. Then everyone decides to say "What's survival called again?" The kill scenes were obviously dolls and badly done. This was frustrating as a simple shift in camera angle could have fixed this problem and made it look so much better.
Tale Three: Epidemic: I did not like this segment at all. It was very bland and the acting effort put in was downright abysmal. I will say, however, that there was some pretty neat imagery in it such as the cross pendant dangling from a gun and a crucifix being welded into a woman's neck. Yan Birch would have been great as Satan but is so over-the-top it's hard to take him seriously. When he isn't hamming it up he looks genuinely scary.
The wrap-around finishes up after the last story. I won't spoil it for you, however. I didn't care for the final denouement because it just didn't seem to fit. I could think of a better way for it to have ended that would have been just as good and just as gory and more apropos to the irony factor.
My main issues were with the lighting, generally poor acting quality and bland cinematography. The special effects were ok in some spots but in others they were terrible. The gunshots in particular. What was more frustrating was that in a lot of the scenes just shifting the camera angle or toning down the lighting would have helped immensely. If it's an early movie by all of the crew involved I could be more forgiving. What I do have a harder time being more lenient with is their insistence on framing every evil person as being highly interested in the horror genre. If you know me and have been around Sci-Fi & Scary for awhile you'll know what's coming. If not, buckle up....
It's hard enough for the horror community to be taken seriously as literature. It's consistently ignored by the mainstream, non-genre oriented awards. Same with horror movies. It's rare that a horror author makes it to any kind of bestseller book lists (i.e. the New York Times bestseller list) unless it's an author with a lot of clout (*cough*Stephen King*cough*). Movies don't fare much better when it comes to Oscar noms and whatnot. What I cannot and will not comprehend is why a movie set firmly in that genre, starring people from that genre, would frame every horror aficionado in the movie as mentally ill, psychotic, and murderous. Thanks. Just thank you so much for that. It's at the point where a lot of horror authors/filmmakers won't even identify themselves as 'horror authors' because it's perceived as a negative connotation. From observation it seems like 'speculative fiction' or 'dark fantasy'. No, if that's how they truly see their work, that's fine. It's their prerogative. But it feels as though it's more of a marketing strategy because horror is a dirty word.
After reading the 10 star reviews ok here and some of the 'critic' (all of them are second rate horror vlogs that were sent free copies to review) the only thing I can think of is that not only were they given a free copy, but they either worked on, contributed to, or know someone involved in the production. Everything about this movie is just terrible. The camera work is bad and looks like it was filmed on an old camcorder. The audio is so bad and switches from white noise filled backgrounds to fairly clear but much louder audio from shot to shot. The editing is jarring and horribly done. People switch places and move about as though they shot a line, stepped aside to see how it turned out, and then tried to get the actors framed in the same place again for the next line. The acting is atrociously bad and the script is worse. The CGI is laughable at best. And the makeup effects are even worse. There is nothing worth watching here. I saw it for free on YouTube and it was still too expensive. 2 hours of the worst trash you will ever see; even if some of the overarching ideas are interesting, they are so poorly handled in every way you really can't tell. 0 stars. Negative stars. Just, please avoid this at all costs. Its an abomination to call this a film.
Did you know
- TriviaLaurene Landon came up with the idea to play her character Miss Tate on crutches.
- ConnectionsReferences Le silence qui tue (1979)
- How long is Terror Tales?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
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