Incannerax
What a waste of my time!!!
Dotsthavesp
I wanted to but couldn't!
Lollivan
It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Lachlan Coulson
This is a gorgeous movie made by a gorgeous spirit.
mathi-76762
This film is scary and funny at the same. We got a lot of Black humor with interesting personalities and Nicholas Cage who plays the "insane dad" role perfectly.
the open ending is fine, and the sickness is coming from flacking tv screens.
moonrandy
Sick but a funny movie bizarre weird I loved it,Cool twist at the end when his father try to kill him
august-eighty
Easy synopsis - a strange mania has taken over the land, making parents want to murder their children. Gory as hell, funny as hell, will be a cult classic.Easy way to explain the film - picture a zombie epidemic, but instead of zombies it's parents overcome by a virus (or something) that makes them turn on their kids and hunt them down to murder them. Movie is played as a dark comedy, and it has some fantastic scenes.Cage is way over the top and it works perfectly for the film.Recommend to watch this with friends while drunk. Tons of fun, non stop gore and carnage.
Otkon
The premise of the film is fairly easy to grasp: what parent hasn't wanted to rhetorically "kill their kid" for the dirtball they are dating, or their disrespectful potty mouth, or the unkempt state of their rooms. This movie uses the horror genre to explore this notion in an extremely literal way. Simple as that. And it is not just an issue with teens; the murderous grandparents showing up, complaining about what a failure Cage is and how horrible the daughter-in-law is, speaks to the generational nature of disappointing offspring. Dr Oz, the truly credible and not-at-all-a-quack TV cardiologist, even spells out that many species in the animal kingdom "savage" their young for a variety of reasons. I like this movie because it shows what a detrimental blight both children and parents are. Nicholas Cage, in particular, typifies this, making his casting and performance both ironic and apropos. Thankfully, Selma Blair is not her usual breathy, navel-gazing self. They both propel a cute and clever script in which only orphans are truly safe.