


I really loved Roscoe, played by Jeff Daniel Phillips, who's more of a badass in the entire team of carnies he's a fighter and he never quits. The Iconic Meg Foster as Venus is the toughest and wisest of them all believe it or not, you'll get to see her wielding a chainsaw against a maniac, and she really looks great for her age, too. At first her character is weak and girlish, but as she fights from one level to another for survival with her team of carnies, she gains more resiliency and transforms into more of a warrior. Sheri Moon Zombie's performance as Charley is extremely impressive. As a horror fan, I'm always rooting for the villains, but in this feature, the good characters are badasses, too, and it's really a tough choice for me to root for sides. The awesome score has it's vibes from classic 70s and 80s horror scores, and as always, from a Rob Zombie film, the soundtrack is filled with super golden oldies. You've got a league of massive icons, major veterans, and newcomers bringing these amazing characters to life. It's all very realistic, and if you actually pay attention, it feels like you're in the movie yourself. The makeup effects are fantastic and the fight scenes are really brutal, along with just about everything in this film.

It's an insanely intense bloody carnival ride of a feature that will leave you with nonstop shocking scenes of murder, mayhem, madness, vulgarity, lots of dark humor, and it's all very well executed in a completely hectic and energetic mode which is bold, brilliant, and just a whole lot of fun. They're thrown into an abandoned warehouse, and forced to play a game called 31, defending themselves against a bunch of psychotic killers dressed up as clowns for 12 hours, and their only chance for survival is to kill or get killed. It takes place back in year 1976 and it's about a group of carnival workers who get kidnapped on Halloween night.
An old school 70's solid grindhouse horror with a simple plot, which is made in the style of the master himself, with its vibes from "House Of 1000 Corpses" and more of "The Devil's Rejects", combined in one extremely epic way. It's up there with my other favorite films of his which are, "House of 1000 Corpses", "The Devil's Rejects", "Halloween II", and "The Lords of Salem". An old A movie I've been waiting and wanting for ages, written and directed by a brave master of horror and cinema, My Hero Mr. The action proceeds much as you would expect if you’ve seen Zombie’s previous films, but unlike some of his previous films, there’s very little suspense, and the kills are ultimately unsatisfying.A movie I've been waiting and wanting for ages, written and directed by a brave master of horror and cinema, My Hero Mr. The group has twelve hours to make it out of a maze populated by characters known as Sick-Head (Pancho Moler), Schizo-Head (David Ury), Psycho-Head (Lew Temple), Death-Head (Torsten Voges), Sex Head (E.G. Their captors are a trio dressed as eighteenth-century aristocrats, led by Malcom McDowell, who force their prisoners to play a game of survival. The protagonists of the film are a group carnies, played by Sheri Moon Zombie, Jeff Daniel Phillips, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Meg Foster, and Kevin Jackson – the characters have names, but those quickly get replaced by numbers – who are kidnapped. The back half of the film picks up a bit, but the film seems to be more about ticking off boxes and making homages than developing plot and character. The protagonists are unlikable, the plot is predictable, and the movie seems to drag interminably. About an hour into 31, Rob Zombie’s latest film, I had the thought: I’m really not enjoying this.
