AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
3,4/10
6,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
O departamento de um xerife corrupto em uma cidade rural montanhosa se desdobra quando uma testemunha involuntária joga uma chave inglesa em sua operação suspeita.O departamento de um xerife corrupto em uma cidade rural montanhosa se desdobra quando uma testemunha involuntária joga uma chave inglesa em sua operação suspeita.O departamento de um xerife corrupto em uma cidade rural montanhosa se desdobra quando uma testemunha involuntária joga uma chave inglesa em sua operação suspeita.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 indicação no total
Kendyll Legier
- Claire
- (as Kendyll Dombek)
Kayla Eva
- News Reporter
- (não creditado)
Avaliações em destaque
This feels like it is an inside joke attempting to be as awful as possible. Just the scenes.... Constantly like what are you doing? No serious team could put this together like this without trying just to mess with people. But if they were, whatever they were trying to do turned to crap. The most confusing scenarios and action possible.
What an embarrassing low point for Bruce Willis.
This is utter crap & looked like it was made on a camcorder.
Even worse than Steven Seagal's Direct-to-dvd films.
Absolutely TERRIBLE in every possible way.
This is utter crap & looked like it was made on a camcorder.
Even worse than Steven Seagal's Direct-to-dvd films.
Absolutely TERRIBLE in every possible way.
To say it bad is not doing it true justice. When you think it can't get any worse, it does and continues to get worse with every scene. Even a score of One is too generous for this garbage.
Feel sorry for Bruce Willis to make a living on his legacy...Home movies are better than this.
We've become accustomed in expecting a sub-par B-grade film when Bruce Willis (PLEASE retire!) is cast, but this one is by far one of the worst.
I get that director Mike Burns and writer Bill Lawrence are newb filmmakers, but this felt like a failed high school drama class production.
The dialogue was atrocious. Literally the entire first half of the film could've been cut down to 10 mins max. The scenes were too long, and/or unnecessary, and most were just plain ridiculous. There was a hefty lack of logic, with major plot and technical issues, and you'll find yourself either laughing or cringing at most scenes.
The pacing was horrible, and with the majority of the story being cheesy af, the normally comfortable 95 min runtime felt like 3+ hours. You'll be tempted to fast forward much of the film, and trust me, you wont miss much. Only the last 15 mins of the film felt like an adequate film production with good continuity in the scenes, and some decent drama and suspense, albeit predictable.
And what was Burns thinking with probably the worst cinematography I've seen in a long time? Were blue and earth-tones the only color filter palette choices? There's a scene when Willis arrives and greets his niece at the cabin, and all that stands out is her bright blue jeans in the entire scene. And the constant distant shots of the skyline, valleys and hills got very tiring fast.
The acting for the most part was bad and unconvincing - I'm sure in part due to Burns' inexperience in directing his cast, and Willis was his usual drab "I'm only here for the paycheck". Only Jaime King's performance was good and convincing throughout, and she basically carried the entire film.
The only decent component in this production was the score, which although still the typical B-film loud and overbearing score, it at least was somewhat fitting and wasn't playing through-out the entire 95 mins. But then again, this is Burns' main field of expertise in the film industry - music director, so had he messed that up, he'd have some 'splaining to do. The soundtrack was also fairly decent, although it played in many scenes that didn't really need loud country/rock music playing in the background.
It's a very generous 3/10 from me, mostly for King's performance, and also cutting the newb filmmakers some slack. Hopefully they learn from their mistakes.
I get that director Mike Burns and writer Bill Lawrence are newb filmmakers, but this felt like a failed high school drama class production.
The dialogue was atrocious. Literally the entire first half of the film could've been cut down to 10 mins max. The scenes were too long, and/or unnecessary, and most were just plain ridiculous. There was a hefty lack of logic, with major plot and technical issues, and you'll find yourself either laughing or cringing at most scenes.
The pacing was horrible, and with the majority of the story being cheesy af, the normally comfortable 95 min runtime felt like 3+ hours. You'll be tempted to fast forward much of the film, and trust me, you wont miss much. Only the last 15 mins of the film felt like an adequate film production with good continuity in the scenes, and some decent drama and suspense, albeit predictable.
And what was Burns thinking with probably the worst cinematography I've seen in a long time? Were blue and earth-tones the only color filter palette choices? There's a scene when Willis arrives and greets his niece at the cabin, and all that stands out is her bright blue jeans in the entire scene. And the constant distant shots of the skyline, valleys and hills got very tiring fast.
The acting for the most part was bad and unconvincing - I'm sure in part due to Burns' inexperience in directing his cast, and Willis was his usual drab "I'm only here for the paycheck". Only Jaime King's performance was good and convincing throughout, and she basically carried the entire film.
The only decent component in this production was the score, which although still the typical B-film loud and overbearing score, it at least was somewhat fitting and wasn't playing through-out the entire 95 mins. But then again, this is Burns' main field of expertise in the film industry - music director, so had he messed that up, he'd have some 'splaining to do. The soundtrack was also fairly decent, although it played in many scenes that didn't really need loud country/rock music playing in the background.
It's a very generous 3/10 from me, mostly for King's performance, and also cutting the newb filmmakers some slack. Hopefully they learn from their mistakes.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesIn an interview with Vulture, director Mike Burns said that they planned to have Bruce Willis shoot all of his scenes across two days. However, due to COVID-19 shutdowns, Willis could only be on set for one day. Therefore, they filmed all of his scenes in a single day.
- Erros de gravaçãoHer name is listed as Shannon, but near the end Jack calls her Sharon.
- ConexõesFeatured in Projector: Out of Death (2021)
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- How long is Out of Death?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 95.813
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 36 min(96 min)
- Cor
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