Five longtime buddies go off on an adventure-filled camping trip at a Missouri lake. Things start off fun, but there is soon tension in the air. The men begin to bicker, there’s a gun, and not all will survive to see Monday. If this sounds like a familiar premise done countless times before, you’d be right but I guarantee you’ve never seen anything quite like Lake Windfall, a poorly written but strikingly filmed, capably acted and endearingly odd horror entry from deaf filmmaker Roger Vass that takes a startling, unpredictable turn about halfway through that has to be seen to be believed. With a small cast and an even more minimal amount of dialogue, Lake Windfall drops us smack dab in the middle of a camping vacation gone horribly, horribly wrong. Yet instead of monsters and mediocrity, the film is a thinking deaf man’s bonanza. The...
- 1/9/2014
- by Tom Stockman
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
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