Thirty years after the infamous 'Death Farm' murders in rural Pennsylvania, serial killing is in season once more.Thirty years after the infamous 'Death Farm' murders in rural Pennsylvania, serial killing is in season once more.Thirty years after the infamous 'Death Farm' murders in rural Pennsylvania, serial killing is in season once more.
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Yes This Is A 1 Star Movie but Gave It 2 For the perfect Breasts In The Shower Scene. Amazing What you can do with a 10 Dollar budget. Plastic skeleton a childs plastic sherrif's outfit and a bottle of ketchup.
As a professional actor I can tell you right now the first opening scene of the movie was done very theatrical with elements of the farm used from green screen (look behind the girl wearing glasses, you'll notice.) Also the two actors in this opening scene clearly are using queue cards to prompt them with their lines. This is what you call 'bad acting.'
Beyond the opening scene I couldn't watch much further. I give it another 10 minutes and then just turned off. The fake blood was just as bad! I don't know what was used but it just didn't even look remotely effective.
Beyond the opening scene I couldn't watch much further. I give it another 10 minutes and then just turned off. The fake blood was just as bad! I don't know what was used but it just didn't even look remotely effective.
If you have zero brain cells and want to lose more, then this is your film.
Only the cover of the film is worth looking at.
Only the cover of the film is worth looking at.
Ignore the bad reviews on this movie and just watch it.
Splatter Farm (1987), in strictly cinematic terms, is a work devoid of any real value: its narrative is rudimentary, its technical execution virtually non-existent, and its aesthetic approach borders on the repulsive. And yet, despite - or perhaps because of - its innumerable flaws, the film retains a singular power. There is in it a raw visceral quality, an unhealthy honesty that, while deeply disturbing, feels authentic. It is a product of its time and context, a primitive testament to the most extreme guerrilla filmmaking, impactful not because of its quality but due to its complete lack of restraint.
Return to Splatter Farm (2020), by contrast, is a very different case. This belated sequel, despite its clear technical improvements - better cinematography, intelligible sound, formal scene construction - is paradoxically even more of a failure. By adopting a self-conscious posture and attempting to replicate, with modern resources, the spirit of a film that was first and foremost an unrepeatable accident, it falls into the trap of becoming a hollow pastiche, stripped of any spontaneity.
The core issue lies not only in its execution, but in its very reason for existing: Return to Splatter Farm offers neither a new interpretation nor a revisionist take. It merely imitates the excesses of the original from an ironically sanitized perspective. By professionalizing what was once pure chaos, it completely loses the marginal and transgressive character that, in all its ineptitude, made Splatter Farm a unique artifact within American underground cinema.
In short, if the 1987 film was an anomaly - a brutal scream from the cultural periphery - this sequel is merely an empty echo, polished into sterility. Its attempt to resurrect the irrecoverable not only fails but relegates the grotesque to the realm of the predictable and trivial.
Return to Splatter Farm (2020), by contrast, is a very different case. This belated sequel, despite its clear technical improvements - better cinematography, intelligible sound, formal scene construction - is paradoxically even more of a failure. By adopting a self-conscious posture and attempting to replicate, with modern resources, the spirit of a film that was first and foremost an unrepeatable accident, it falls into the trap of becoming a hollow pastiche, stripped of any spontaneity.
The core issue lies not only in its execution, but in its very reason for existing: Return to Splatter Farm offers neither a new interpretation nor a revisionist take. It merely imitates the excesses of the original from an ironically sanitized perspective. By professionalizing what was once pure chaos, it completely loses the marginal and transgressive character that, in all its ineptitude, made Splatter Farm a unique artifact within American underground cinema.
In short, if the 1987 film was an anomaly - a brutal scream from the cultural periphery - this sequel is merely an empty echo, polished into sterility. Its attempt to resurrect the irrecoverable not only fails but relegates the grotesque to the realm of the predictable and trivial.
Did you know
- TriviaFilming took place around the summer of 2019.
- How long is Return to Splatter Farm?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Language
- Also known as
- Surmafarm 2
- Filming locations
- Wellsboro, Pennsylvania, USA(on location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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