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Cyberstalker (1995)

User reviews

Cyberstalker

5 reviews
3/10

Came for the Combs, Stayed because i fell asleep

Its boring. That's the worst thing about this movie. If this had played to its low budget strengths and gone over the top and camp it could have been a decent movie. Instead it takes itself so seriously. The leads are dull flat characters. The few jokes there are, aren't funny. The CGI is dated and cheap in the worst ways. It does have something i do love- Jeffrey Combs, and even better a Jeffrey Combs ranting monologue. But he's such a gross sleaze in an already slogging movie, that its hardly a pay off. I watched it for you Jeff, but i'll never sit through it again.
  • the0verboss
  • Oct 30, 2021
  • Permalink
3/10

Meh.

Some serial killer broad is out killing people to get something from a computer. Cyberstalker (aka Digital Prophet) blows. I like the idea of computer possession telling this broad to kill ala Evilspeak but the execution results in sluggish pacing, minimal sci fi elements, dildo acting, dumb ass story and so on. And no this is not a "so bad it's good" film whatever that means. It deep throats Ron Jeremy.
  • DavyDissonance
  • Nov 29, 2017
  • Permalink

Woman Enters a New Life

  • tedg
  • Aug 1, 2010
  • Permalink
1/10

Hasn't The Style Necessary To Sustain Itself.

Ill-considered plotting, as is the case here, is de rigueur for any film released beneath the banner of Troma Entertainment, the catalog of which for its greatest part consists of movies displaying various forms of excess, designed for the acceptance of a manifest audience of half-wits. Among Troma's less atrocious products is this affair, shot in Dallas, that concerns a serial killer, referred to as a "Cyberstalker" (the film's title for its original release, renamed THE DIGITAL PROPHET for video distribution), who fails to leave clues or a crime pattern other than that of crossing the arms of victims atop their chests, until eventually a team of police detectives determines, much later than most viewers will expect, that each of the slain regularly accessed an internet web site that has caught the fancy of a large number of cultish devotees. This site, Cyecom, specializes in outrageous fantasy and is linked with a fetishistic underground graphic comic book, "Cyberthoughts", brainchild of Andy Coberman (Jeffrey Combs) who, in spite of being a heroin addict, apparently manages to minimize the effects of the baleful narcotic enough to own and operate a retail comic book shop, while also writing the periodical Cyberthoughts that the detectives determine may somehow be connective with the exasperating frequency of the homicides. Into the picture appears "Newman" (Annie Biggs as Annie Haslett), a waifish acolyte of Cyecom and reader of Cyberthoughts who contacts Detective Meg Jordan (Schnele Wilson) and expresses dread of the unknown killer whose vicious acts have been given front page newspaper exposure. Newman reveals to the investigator that she had acquaintanceship with all of the victims by means of the Cyecom web site and, as a result, fears for her safety. The killer's prey were dispatched by gun, knife, strangulation, and electrocution, an olio of methods not discussed by the detectives, although viewers are treated to a surfeit of red herrings that are essentially irritants to those who will clearly see that not all of the murdered are actually related in any way with Cyecom and will begin to wonder if any specific purpose to all of this may be in the offing as the film plods along. Computer graphics become more striking as the scenario advances, and their use enhances the narrative more than does a weak screenplay hampered by the mentioned strained application of false leads that, in conjunction with capricious pacing, inhibits needed problem development that properly should be focused upon a possible rationale for the killings rather than technologic devices. Members of the cast, along with the director, are also producers here, and although there is little merit for a viewer to extract from their efforts in this film, they are hopefully free from the questionable value of association with Thoma, and their subsequent work should be considered, as it is ever a pleasure to follow progress, in a daunting business, of independent filmmakers who demonstrate a sincerely creative bent. By overlooking the embarrassingly poor playing of Combs, one finds worthy performances in this item, with Biggs/Haslett earning acting honours for her crafted turn, despite substandard dialogue.
  • rsoonsa
  • May 21, 2006
  • Permalink
9/10

Almost a "Ten"

  • JohnHowardReid
  • Apr 17, 2017
  • Permalink

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