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Strawberry Flavored Plastic

  • 2019
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
3.9/10
177
YOUR RATING
Strawberry Flavored Plastic (2019)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:51
1 Video
9 Photos
CrimeDramaHorrorThriller

A sensational, sentimental, and philosophical horror neo-noir that follows the still-at-large crimes of Noel, a repentant, classy and charming serial killer loose in the suburbs of New York.A sensational, sentimental, and philosophical horror neo-noir that follows the still-at-large crimes of Noel, a repentant, classy and charming serial killer loose in the suburbs of New York.A sensational, sentimental, and philosophical horror neo-noir that follows the still-at-large crimes of Noel, a repentant, classy and charming serial killer loose in the suburbs of New York.

  • Director
    • Colin Bemis
  • Writer
    • Colin Bemis
  • Stars
    • Aidan Bristow
    • Nicholas Urda
    • Andres Montejo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.9/10
    177
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Colin Bemis
    • Writer
      • Colin Bemis
    • Stars
      • Aidan Bristow
      • Nicholas Urda
      • Andres Montejo
    • 22User reviews
    • 37Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Strawberry Flavored Plastic
    Trailer 1:51
    Strawberry Flavored Plastic

    Photos8

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    Top cast28

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    Aidan Bristow
    Aidan Bristow
    • Noel Rose
    Nicholas Urda
    • Errol Morgan
    Andres Montejo
    Andres Montejo
    • Ellis Archer
    Bianca Soto
    • Lana Morgan
    Matthew Baker
    • Restaurant Man
    David Beach
    • Elderly Man
    Dana Belmont
    • Restaurant Patron
    Steve Boghossian
    Steve Boghossian
    • Franklin
    Jim Cairl
    • Norman
    Bianca Drougas
    • Restaurant Patron
    Carmela Drougas
    • Restaurant Patron
    Despina Drougas
    • Restaurant Patron
    Margeaux Dupuy
    Margeaux Dupuy
    • Popcorn Server
    • (as Margeaux Caroline)
    Erica Duke Forsyth
    • Joanna Dolan
    Skylar Fray
    • Restaurant Patron
    Stuart Fray
    • Jeffrey
    Henry Hernandez
    • Walter Dolan
    Logan C. Kenney
    • Tanner Boy
    • (as Logan Kenney)
    • Director
      • Colin Bemis
    • Writer
      • Colin Bemis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    3.9177
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    Featured reviews

    8jjaeger-83087

    Filming an Emotional Psychopath

    What can I say about Strawberry Flavored Plastic? It's a solid mockumentary about an at-large serial killer named Noel Rose (played wonderfully by Aidan Bristow), who's next in line along with Patrick Bateman (American Psycho), Henry (Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer), and Hannibal Lecter (Silence of the Lambs). This particular psychopath is an emotional type with a special motive. And what is that special motive? Well, you have to see this film to find out as the filmmakers Errol Morgan (Nicholas Urda) and Ellis Archer (Andres Montejo) are partaking to film a risky documentary on Noel's life. The shots in this film are wonderful, plus the suspense is top notch. Defiantly recommend it!
    1frenchvanillagirl

    ABSOLUTELY HORRIBLE!!!!

    I tried really hard to watch this because I paid $5 to rent it. It was torture for the 1st 10 minutes so I actually fast forwarded it (something I never do) I could only endure 15 more minutes of it! Probably the biggest joke of a movie I've ever seen. So frustrated, don't waste your time or money!!!
    1w00f

    Raspberry Flavored Tedium

    I forced myself to sit through an hour of this before giving up. 90% of what I saw was people sitting around talking in stilted sentences that sounded like someone wrote them. People don't talk this way.

    It drags and it lags. There's an aura of hubris around this film, the kind one might expect from a naïve beginning director. Despite claims, there's nothing sensational about this snoozer.
    3lifelinespublishing

    unconvincing

    If you're going to do a documentary / reality style type of movie, make sure it's really convincing and your character, in this case, a serial killer, make sure he has personality, the guy who plays the serial killer isn't believable for me, his actions are not genuine in my opinion, and so it's flat.

    I am sorry because I did not even bother to watch the ending, that's how it sucked for me. I agree with the one reviewer who gave it a 1/10.

    I gave it a 3 because the idea is fascinating +2 for that actually
    6Armin_Nikkhah_Shirazi

    "You will know the devil not when you shake his hands..but when he shakes yours"

    The concept "serial killer needs to express himself to the camera" has by now been explored quite well in multiple mockumentary/found footage movies, such as MAN BITES DOG (1992), THE LAST HORROR MOVIE (2003), THE MAGICIAN (2005), RANDOM ACTS OF VIOLENCE (2012), CREEP (2014) and CREEP 2 (2017).

    Joining this oeuvre of generally high-quality movies is now STRAWBERRY FLAVORED PLASTIC, the title of which refers to people who have a certain quality of sweetness that is entirely fake, an inauthentic pleasantness that characterizes the banal existence of those who fail to express who they really are because they know that society would not approve.

    The protagonist, an intelligent serial killer, uses his opposition to this type and his own falling into it as philosophical cover to justify indulging what he calls the "unscratchable itch", evidently an overwhelming desire at random moments to hurt random people. However, he still professes that he wants to change. He allows two film-makers to document his life, and it is through this footage of him giving interviews and being filmed that we get a glimpse of who he is.

    And it is never more than a glimpse, because as soon as we think that we have some understanding of him as a person, he surprises us with something completely unexpected. One of the documentarians makes this point explicitly in the movie.

    The actor playing the serial killer does an outstanding job, and when he adopts the "nice" persona, it seems so genuine that his sudden transformations into the "evil" persona becomes that much more shocking and disturbing.

    Compared to the aforementioned list of movies, this film puts the least emphasis on actual killings, though there are some. There is also a fantastically creepy scene in which he ambushes the two film-makers after they break an agreement he made with them. But overall, this is a very contemplative, philosophically-minded movie which not only explores the mind of a serial killer but also the ethical quandaries that those put themselves into who wish to document it.

    The characters talk in a curiously stilted way which reminds me a little of how in THE COUNSELOR (2013), itself interpretable broadly as an exploration of different levels of sociopathy, the characters talked like they were reciting book passages, no doubt because Cormac McCarthy himself wrote the screenplay. I think in PLASTIC, it was effective for the serial killer to talk this way, but less so for the documentarians.

    I believe the dialogue and musings in this film will cause many to accuse it of pretentiousness, a charge I was willing to deny until I saw the ending, more below.

    The movie has a somewhat slow pace, and certainly those expecting action and suspense will be largely disappointed, as will be those who are not into cerebral movies. The ending is rather baffling. I will share below my thoughts on it, but be warned, spoilers ahead.

    Toward the end, the serial killer informs the documentarians that they will stop communicating because he intends to do something "catastrophically large". After that, we hear an audio recording of the wife of one of the documentarians reporting him to the police, which is followed by footage of him getting into a car with his little daughter, a notice that there have been 4 unresolved killings in Maine, and another audio recording between a police detective and one of the film-makers, who says he won't be released (presumably from prison) until his own little son is 17. He states, very much in the speaking manner of the serial killer, that his project will never be finished. Finally, we see a sequence in which the serial killer breaks into that documentarian's home and kills his wife before observing himself in the mirror.

    So, what seems fairly clear is that the serial killer moved with his Daughter from New York to Maine, and carried on his killings there, despite the fact that he had earlier professed a desire to stop. His "catastrophically large" project was nothing more than a ruse to distract the film-makers.

    The unclear part is why the film-maker was convicted, presumably for the murder of his wife, why he seems to have accepted responsibility for it, and why he begins to speak exactly like the serial killer.

    This would have made sense to me if the final mirror image reflection showed the documentarian. In fact, that would have beautifully tied the overall theme of the movie together: he discovered through the process of making his documentary that he was "Strawberry Flavored Plastic", decided to break from this type and become authentic. But that entailed killing his wife who, the movie makes quite clear, stood in the way of him realizing his dreams. He did it unapologetically, thereby following into the serial killer's footsteps, going even so far as adopting his way of speaking. The great irony here then would be that he "achieved authenticity" by adopting someone else's persona.

    Alas, the man in the mirror in the final scene is the serial killer, not the husband, and so this theory goes out the window.

    Because it seems so oddly specific in how it undermines a rational explanation for the husband's behavior at the end, the final scene makes me suspect that it was designed to create perplexity for the sake of perplexity. It smacks of pretentiousness, and so I must concede that, perhaps, those who have made this charge against the movie were right, after all.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 7, 2019 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Пластик с клубничным вкусом
    • Production companies
      • New Animal Motion Pictures
      • The Neon Briefcase Motion Picture Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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