Didn't see it mentioned yet, but one of you guys should check out Bambi II (just out on blu - ray last week I believe) just in case it's an awesome horror movie about a rabid deer going on
a killing spree through some town full of hunters in the deep (US) south.
Movies: Stallone revives his cold warrior for a pre-retirement
killing spree through the corrupt armies of Burma in Rambo; Woody Allen delivers another «serious» film in his third London - set production Cassandra's Dream; and Paul Schrader directs Woody Harrelson in The Walker:
Not exact matches
«They're young they're in love and they
kill people» was the tag line for Arthur Penn's Bonnie And Clyde, but it's just as fitting for Terrence Malick's 1973 debut, which casts Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek as a murderous couple on a crime
spree through Dakota's badlands.
At first blush, Ramsay's film would appear to be a look into the genesis and reasons behind the title teen's
killing spree; the film we get is something different entirely, an exploration of loss and pain and grief
through the eyes of the mother (Tilda Swinton) left shattered and battered in the wake of her son's irrational, irredeemable actions.
Hope for survival rests in the hands of a mysterious vigilante (Frank Grillo) to get them
through the 12 - hour
killing spree.
The gripping build up certainly pulls you in
through a sight target, only to shock as said sniper, taking what feels like an eternity, before unleashing pot - shots at innocent civilians in a seemingly random
killing spree.
He's also remarkably skilled at his job, enough so that he can take out an entire SWAT team with ease and actually dance his way
through the
killing spree to increase the fun factor.
The girls yearn to become real - life horror legends, and start a
killing spree in Rosedale, their Midwestern hometown, then achieve online superstardom
through sympathetic responses — all while pinning their bloodshed on a patsy.