A rebel seeking abandoned dogs on a remote island finds herself in a harrowing situation filled with terror and adrenaline-fueled chaos.A rebel seeking abandoned dogs on a remote island finds herself in a harrowing situation filled with terror and adrenaline-fueled chaos.A rebel seeking abandoned dogs on a remote island finds herself in a harrowing situation filled with terror and adrenaline-fueled chaos.
Marisa Toriello
- Madison
- (as Marisa Arias)
Featured reviews
This is so painfully bad in every way imaginable. The use of horrendous quality CGI in some scenes and AI generated images in others really makes everything feel super disjointed snd sloppy.
The acting is awful, and if I hadn't read the movie description, I would never know it was supposed to be a horror comedy. There are nearly zero funny moments. Other than the ones are just funny because of how bad and cheesy the acting is. The character Collins is especially unlikable and has mostly only cringey interactions throughout.
Very upset and saddened I wasted time and money of this piece of trash. I'm disappointed in every one involved with making this, but more than anything I'm disappointed in me. For paying actually money for one of thr worst movies I have ever seen.
The acting is awful, and if I hadn't read the movie description, I would never know it was supposed to be a horror comedy. There are nearly zero funny moments. Other than the ones are just funny because of how bad and cheesy the acting is. The character Collins is especially unlikable and has mostly only cringey interactions throughout.
Very upset and saddened I wasted time and money of this piece of trash. I'm disappointed in every one involved with making this, but more than anything I'm disappointed in me. For paying actually money for one of thr worst movies I have ever seen.
Griff Furst's A Breed Apart is a brutal, pulse-pounding ride that strips away the glitz of influencer culture and replaces it with raw, primal terror. While the premise teases satire, what unfolds is a surprisingly grounded survival horror that keeps its foot on the gas from start to finish.
Violet, portrayed with resilience and grit by Hayden Panettiere, is introduced as a clout-chasing rebel with a love for dogs especially the abandoned and misunderstood. When she's lured to a remote island under the promise of exclusive content and viral fame, she and her fellow influencers find themselves caught in a deadly trap. Their task? Hunt down the island's mythic, man-eating dogs before becoming their next meal.
The genius of A Breed Apart lies in its claustrophobic setting and escalating tension. Furst doesn't waste time; the horror hits early and hard. The island, lush and haunting, becomes a character in its own right its silence broken only by the screams of the hunted and the snarls of predators that have clearly adapted to outwit man.
What makes this film stand out from other creature horrors is its lack of reliance on jump scares. Instead, Furst builds dread organically, drawing on isolation, mistrust among the guests, and the ever-present fear that they've underestimated the intelligence and coordination-of the monstrous canines.
Virginia Gardner and Grace Caroline Currey deliver grounded performances, showing the slow unraveling of personas as survival instincts take over. There's little glamour in this world; even the most polished characters are stripped down to their most desperate selves.
Don't expect a morality tale or a biting satire this is horror through and through. A Breed Apart succeeds by not holding back. It's tense, fast-paced, and violent without apology.
Violet, portrayed with resilience and grit by Hayden Panettiere, is introduced as a clout-chasing rebel with a love for dogs especially the abandoned and misunderstood. When she's lured to a remote island under the promise of exclusive content and viral fame, she and her fellow influencers find themselves caught in a deadly trap. Their task? Hunt down the island's mythic, man-eating dogs before becoming their next meal.
The genius of A Breed Apart lies in its claustrophobic setting and escalating tension. Furst doesn't waste time; the horror hits early and hard. The island, lush and haunting, becomes a character in its own right its silence broken only by the screams of the hunted and the snarls of predators that have clearly adapted to outwit man.
What makes this film stand out from other creature horrors is its lack of reliance on jump scares. Instead, Furst builds dread organically, drawing on isolation, mistrust among the guests, and the ever-present fear that they've underestimated the intelligence and coordination-of the monstrous canines.
Virginia Gardner and Grace Caroline Currey deliver grounded performances, showing the slow unraveling of personas as survival instincts take over. There's little glamour in this world; even the most polished characters are stripped down to their most desperate selves.
Don't expect a morality tale or a biting satire this is horror through and through. A Breed Apart succeeds by not holding back. It's tense, fast-paced, and violent without apology.
First couple minutes, when they were just introducing the influencers, actually felt like this could be something fun. But after that... boy oh boy.
The dialogues are straight-up stupid. Most of the time I couldn't even tell if there was a joke, like was I supposed to laugh? Is this supposed to be a parody?
The CGI... I swear they used some random Chinese AI to generate it and they've got the absolute awful eye hurting result and were like "Yep, perfect. Ship it!" No second tries, no shame. Just pure visual pain.
I've seen a lotta low budget action flicks, but this one takes the crown for absolute laziness.
The biggest mystery? How the hell they got Hayden, Ginny, or Grace to be part of this? All three of them are thousands of miles above this dumpster fire.
The dialogues are straight-up stupid. Most of the time I couldn't even tell if there was a joke, like was I supposed to laugh? Is this supposed to be a parody?
The CGI... I swear they used some random Chinese AI to generate it and they've got the absolute awful eye hurting result and were like "Yep, perfect. Ship it!" No second tries, no shame. Just pure visual pain.
I've seen a lotta low budget action flicks, but this one takes the crown for absolute laziness.
The biggest mystery? How the hell they got Hayden, Ginny, or Grace to be part of this? All three of them are thousands of miles above this dumpster fire.
The visual fx studio on this one should be embarassed. Sure the writing was terrible, and the acting was bad, but it wasn't until i saw the digital fx, that truly hated this movie.
Couldn't finish it. Gt 20 minutes in, and there was just something about the fake dogs. Sure they were composited terribly, but there was this weird feel to them, and all the fx that i couldn't put my finger on. Then it hit me. Why everything was so swimmy, and visual inconsistent. It's all just AI 'art'. Lazy garbage.
Anyone involved in the production of this giant turd should leave film production, and never look back.
Couldn't finish it. Gt 20 minutes in, and there was just something about the fake dogs. Sure they were composited terribly, but there was this weird feel to them, and all the fx that i couldn't put my finger on. Then it hit me. Why everything was so swimmy, and visual inconsistent. It's all just AI 'art'. Lazy garbage.
Anyone involved in the production of this giant turd should leave film production, and never look back.
Needless to say that I had of course never heard about this 2025 movie titled "A Breed Apart" prior to getting the chance to sit down and watch it.
The movie's cover, however, just permeates with low budget vibes, so I can't claim that I harbored great expectations to the movie. And any movie that is written, directed and starring the same person is usually not great. But I still opted to give the movie the benefit of the doubt.
"A Breed Apart" was apparently inspired by "The Breed" from 2006. So that counted for something I suppose.
The writers put together a pretty straight forward script. And the narrative was actually not bad, but the insanely poor CGI ruined the movie, hands down.
The acting performances in the movie were actually fair.
The CGI animated dogs in the movie were hilarious to look at. They were so insanely poor animated and rendered that it was unfathomable. I am flabbergasted at how something that atrocious can manage to pass quality control in 2025. Didn't anyone in the CGI or editing department stop up and go "wait a minute, this looks terrible"? It just was difficult to look past the God awful CGI in the movie, especially since the dogs played such a crucial part in the narrative. And the dog that was able to crawl a rope? Well, that was just epic.
I managed to sit through the movie in its entirety, but believe me this is not a movie that will ever grace my screen a second time.
My rating of "A Breed Apart" lands on a generous three out of ten stars.
The movie's cover, however, just permeates with low budget vibes, so I can't claim that I harbored great expectations to the movie. And any movie that is written, directed and starring the same person is usually not great. But I still opted to give the movie the benefit of the doubt.
"A Breed Apart" was apparently inspired by "The Breed" from 2006. So that counted for something I suppose.
The writers put together a pretty straight forward script. And the narrative was actually not bad, but the insanely poor CGI ruined the movie, hands down.
The acting performances in the movie were actually fair.
The CGI animated dogs in the movie were hilarious to look at. They were so insanely poor animated and rendered that it was unfathomable. I am flabbergasted at how something that atrocious can manage to pass quality control in 2025. Didn't anyone in the CGI or editing department stop up and go "wait a minute, this looks terrible"? It just was difficult to look past the God awful CGI in the movie, especially since the dogs played such a crucial part in the narrative. And the dog that was able to crawl a rope? Well, that was just epic.
I managed to sit through the movie in its entirety, but believe me this is not a movie that will ever grace my screen a second time.
My rating of "A Breed Apart" lands on a generous three out of ten stars.
Did you know
- TriviaGrace Caroline Currey and Virginia Gardner previously starred together in Fall (2022)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 39m(99 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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