IMDb RATING
4.9/10
4.5K
YOUR RATING
After a pawn shop robbery goes askew, two criminals take refuge at a remote farmhouse to try to let the heat die down, but find something much more menacing.After a pawn shop robbery goes askew, two criminals take refuge at a remote farmhouse to try to let the heat die down, but find something much more menacing.After a pawn shop robbery goes askew, two criminals take refuge at a remote farmhouse to try to let the heat die down, but find something much more menacing.
Christopher Robleto-Harvey
- Harvey
- (as Christopher Robleto)
Andrew Kern
- Extra
- (as Drew Kern)
Featured reviews
Emile Hirsch and Stephen Dorf both play great roles and they do it well. The storyline is a bit played out but there are some very imaginative blood and gore scenes that keep you watching.
I was very impressed with Emile Hirsch's acting in this movie. He plays the perfect maniacal crazy that you just want to hate. And Stephen Dorf plays an army medic who is hired to help out on a heist that goes severely wrong.
It's a solid B++ movie I would definitely recommend it to others. If you like the blood and gore genre. This movie will be on the top of the blood and gore B++ genre.
Watch it for yourself and find out!!
I was very impressed with Emile Hirsch's acting in this movie. He plays the perfect maniacal crazy that you just want to hate. And Stephen Dorf plays an army medic who is hired to help out on a heist that goes severely wrong.
It's a solid B++ movie I would definitely recommend it to others. If you like the blood and gore genre. This movie will be on the top of the blood and gore B++ genre.
Watch it for yourself and find out!!
This movie is pretty pointless and lame to be honest. I found myself just wanting it end. I suppose it's just a cash grab but I just keep asking my self why this even exists.
There's nothing original about it, characters are all non-enjoyable, there's no good dialogue, and it's just exceedingly dark and gory for no reason.
It's a go thru the motions wannabe horror movie with nothing really of value. The editing is pretty bad too when it comes to continuity so you know there weren't many takes and it's just not satisfying to watch.
Overall it's a big NO. Didn't like it all and felt like it wasn't even worth watching. Don't bother. 3.8/10.
There's nothing original about it, characters are all non-enjoyable, there's no good dialogue, and it's just exceedingly dark and gory for no reason.
It's a go thru the motions wannabe horror movie with nothing really of value. The editing is pretty bad too when it comes to continuity so you know there weren't many takes and it's just not satisfying to watch.
Overall it's a big NO. Didn't like it all and felt like it wasn't even worth watching. Don't bother. 3.8/10.
Kitamura's films don't always work for me, but I've already realised that it's not just the fact that the director mixes things I really like with things I don't like so much...in fact, it has a lot to do with my state of mind and how I "dive" or not into the film. After the suffering of boredom that was Night Sky (previous film at Grimmfest), I had to refill myself with 500ml of Monster Energy and was prepared for the worst, so all that came was...music to my ears.
As a relatively serious thriller, this works well for almost two full acts, with some good characters and others as annoying as vuvuzelas in my ear for 90 minutes. Then, when everything starts to get more predictable and repetitive, the film pulls out its secret weapon: absurd levels of gratuitous violence, blood everywhere, and some of the most original scenes in recent times. I laughed at and that was the intention. The last act is brutal, it's over-the-top, but it's really fun and this dose of adrenaline was all I could ask for after the traumatic experience I had before. In the midst of a well-known cast, it was the young Gigi Zumbado who proved to be an excellent surprise.
As a relatively serious thriller, this works well for almost two full acts, with some good characters and others as annoying as vuvuzelas in my ear for 90 minutes. Then, when everything starts to get more predictable and repetitive, the film pulls out its secret weapon: absurd levels of gratuitous violence, blood everywhere, and some of the most original scenes in recent times. I laughed at and that was the intention. The last act is brutal, it's over-the-top, but it's really fun and this dose of adrenaline was all I could ask for after the traumatic experience I had before. In the midst of a well-known cast, it was the young Gigi Zumbado who proved to be an excellent surprise.
This is a decent one-time watch thriller/gore-fest B film that has the Blumhouse production feel to it. It was well directed, with a decently paced cohesive script, that offers plenty of thrills and gore for this genre's fans. It's nothing revolutionary we haven't seen before, but it was done right and it worked well. The comfortable 86 min runtime was used effectively. All casting and performances were great, especially the lovely Gigi Zumbado and Stephen Dorff, but I didn't like Emile Hirsch's character, who was more annoying than convincing, especially with his hilariously lame Harry Potter glasses. Omitting the geek glasses would've gone a long way for his character. Nevertheless, still a well shot film, with the exception the cinematography was too dark in many scenes, but the score was on point for a B film. A well deserved 7/10 from me.
Ryuhei Kitamura, a long time horror adventurer and director of such films as "Versus", "The Midnight Meat Train", "No One Lives" and "Downrage", serves us yet another B horror romp with a name which's purpose I still can't quite figure out, besides the fact that it sounds kinda cool. This time we're in for a slasher type actioneer.
The familiar enough Stephen Dorff and Emile Hirsch star as a criminal duo of an ex-military medic and a certified psychopath, respectively, who botch a pawnshop robbery, take poor Grace (Gigi Zumbado) as a hostage, and find a middle-of-nowhere farmhouse where to let the heat die down, but instead it'll go up, for the farm's inhabitants are far more dangerous criminals.
I was expecting a slasher flick in the vein of "Texas Chainsaw Massacre", but that's not quite it. Although we are fed plenty of action and gore, the film struggles to build tension or any kind of scares, and, for its setting, doesn't have the morbidly beautiful rural atmosphere or aesthetic I came to hope for. Acting levels seemingly vary too much, Dorff is dorffy fine, but typically awesome Hirsch does an overkill in his pastiche psychopath caricature role. The villains definitely won't be christened as new horror icons, and our main hero Grace is simply just okay. One thing I found quite annoying was the editing, fine for the most part, but unnecessarily bats*it at times. Now, despite all its flaws, "The Price We Pay" is a B horror that's well aware of its mission, which is to keep you entertained for a well fitted runtime of 80 minutes, and it does so with consistently building up pacing, and ending with a finale that would've been adored by horror fans back in the 80's. Only wish the story was better and more fully developed.
If you're looking for a reasonably gory low-budget graphic horror fest with some familiar faces, and are fine with it fading from your memory within a week, give it a go. My rating: 5/10.
The familiar enough Stephen Dorff and Emile Hirsch star as a criminal duo of an ex-military medic and a certified psychopath, respectively, who botch a pawnshop robbery, take poor Grace (Gigi Zumbado) as a hostage, and find a middle-of-nowhere farmhouse where to let the heat die down, but instead it'll go up, for the farm's inhabitants are far more dangerous criminals.
I was expecting a slasher flick in the vein of "Texas Chainsaw Massacre", but that's not quite it. Although we are fed plenty of action and gore, the film struggles to build tension or any kind of scares, and, for its setting, doesn't have the morbidly beautiful rural atmosphere or aesthetic I came to hope for. Acting levels seemingly vary too much, Dorff is dorffy fine, but typically awesome Hirsch does an overkill in his pastiche psychopath caricature role. The villains definitely won't be christened as new horror icons, and our main hero Grace is simply just okay. One thing I found quite annoying was the editing, fine for the most part, but unnecessarily bats*it at times. Now, despite all its flaws, "The Price We Pay" is a B horror that's well aware of its mission, which is to keep you entertained for a well fitted runtime of 80 minutes, and it does so with consistently building up pacing, and ending with a finale that would've been adored by horror fans back in the 80's. Only wish the story was better and more fully developed.
If you're looking for a reasonably gory low-budget graphic horror fest with some familiar faces, and are fine with it fading from your memory within a week, give it a go. My rating: 5/10.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is dedicated to Tyler Sanders who played Danny. Sanders died at the age of 18 from accidental fentanyl overdose a few months after production wrapped up. Ironically, Gigi Zumbado's character Grace used to be a drug addict.
- GoofsIn the last scene in the truck, Grace took the time to shower and change clothes, however, she still has blood stains on her forefront and cheek.
- Alternate versionsOriginally released in uncut with a SPIO/JK approval in Germany, a cut version shortened by 1 minutes with a "Not under 18" rating was also released in October 2023.
- SoundtracksGateman
Written and performed by Yu Sammy
- How long is The Price We Pay?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $52,582
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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