Parasites
Parasites is about a group of 3 friends who
take a wrong turn in a seedy section of Los Angeles and encounter an
angry and violent gang of homeless vagrants. It becomes a bloody and
gritty fight for survival as one of the friends escapes and attempts
to outrun the roving gang and their leader.
Parasites starts out strong and strikes a
familiar chord as it feels like a cross between Wrong Turn and Escape
From New York, minus the hillbillies and futuristic world and
swapping the backwoods for the concrete jungle. The filmmakers did an
excellent job of making the worst parts of a modern city look like a
lawless nightmare and backing it with a Carpenter-esque score that
gave it an extra flare of credibility with this horror fan.
The violent, rag tag group of filthy street
dwellers with chains and shovels and rusty knives for weapons are
dressed in shoddy clothing and have a group-think mentality like a
group of blood thirsty zombies. They have their lifestyle and their
inner group rankings and seek out the escaped trespasser with a
crazed dedication. It's a well realized vision for the group that
injects extra grit and fear into the story.
Robert Miano as Wilco, the leader of the
gang, plays his role with the perfect mix of subtle craziness and
unhinged anger. The character could have easily been cartoonish and
laughable but Miano owns the role with an assured mad glint in his
eye and complete believibility.
Sean Samuels is also very strong in his role
as Marshall Colter, the lone friend on the run from the homeless
gang. Some interesting and unique characters pop up throughout the
film, most notably is Silvia Spross as Mona, a prostitute living on
the streets.
The film is visually impressive and we'll
acted with an intriguing yet simple set up. The biggest issue with
Parasites is that it didn't have enough going on to make it exciting
or to hold my attention thoroughly throughout the film. There's a lot
of running and chasing and wandering as music plays that serves as
the bulk of the action, but it's just not very compelling. It feels
like a short film puffed up and filled out to feature length. And I'm
not saying Parasites is a bad film, there just isn't a lot of meat on
the bone here.
And I just have to say, screenwriters have
got to come up with something better than, "I have no signal"
when addressing why a character can't just call for help with their
cell phone. In the middle of the mountains or woods? Ok, I'll buy
that. But when you're a few miles away from downtown Los Angeles it
just doesn't fly.
Parasites is gritty and dirty and mean. It
created a nightmare landscape that is hidden in the darkest parts of
our big cities and the film shows a lot of promise for writer and
director Chad Ferrin. I just wish it had more to it to justify its
run time because although Parasites had some killer, it was mostly
filler.
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