Shash Film has alerted us to a new movie trailer
for the suspense flick «Catch.44».
You won't confuse this monotonous excuse
for a suspense flick with the experience of an actual rollercoaster, as this is as dull and slow as a thriller could ever be and still be called one.
Not exact matches
Yet, the film plays out with little sense of requisite
suspense that made the first Psycho such a great film, and many of the scenes, including the murders, play out as if they were made
for a psychological drama, rather than in a scary horror
flick or tense, nail - biting thriller.
At this point, a reader might think that all of this sounds like a decent set - up
for, say, an arthouse
suspense flick about bourgeois mores, à la Michael Haneke.
Gillespie and Kostanski know their way around satirical genre material (check out Manborg, Father's Day, and The Editor) but this
flick earns unexpected points
for (mostly) eschewing the humor in favor of
suspense, tension, dread, carnage, monsters, tentacles, and more carnage.
This is an intelligent spy yarn, with terrific performances and nice locale work, making this a good looking
suspense flick for the thinking man.
Part Agatha Christie, part Alfred Hitchcock, Identity is a modern updating of old - school mystery /
suspense for today's slasher -
flick loving audiences.
It's an appropriate plot
for the game, and would feel right at home in any horror /
suspense flick (the game's original voice cast was so infamously bad it gave the game a terrific B - movie appeal.