Mr. Hell (2006)A secret bioweapons lab invaded by mercenaries becomes a house of horrors when they encounter MR. HELL, an ancient serial killer who takes souls by removing his victims eyes. Director:Rob McKinnon |
|
| 0Share... |
Mr. Hell (2006)A secret bioweapons lab invaded by mercenaries becomes a house of horrors when they encounter MR. HELL, an ancient serial killer who takes souls by removing his victims eyes. Director:Rob McKinnon |
|
| 0Share... |
| Credited cast: | |||
| Larry Cashion | ... |
Harry Eugene Loveless
|
|
| Rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
|
|
Annie Blanco | ... |
TV News Reporter
|
|
|
David Carren | ... |
V.C.
|
|
|
Tina Cohen | ... |
Max's Mom
|
|
|
Jordan Consorte | ... |
Tyler (child)
|
|
|
Jett Texas Elliott | ... |
Max
|
| Pavan Grover | ... |
Georgio
|
|
|
|
Brent Himes | ... |
Berkeley
|
|
|
Sloan K. Hood | ... |
Utu
|
| Danny Kamin | ... |
Wesley Kane
|
|
|
|
Kristin Ketterer | ... |
Monica
|
| Daniel Magill | ... |
M. G. Burke
|
|
|
|
Alan Martin | ... |
Dr. Karl Matthews
|
|
|
Jen McCoy Miller | ... |
Jan Leigh Morrison
|
| Rob McKinnon | ... |
Foreman
|
|
Fourteen years ago, Dr. Karl Matthews, head of Government Biolab 83, is savagely murdered by ancient soul-taker, MR. HELL. Today, Dr. Matthews' daughter, Tyler, has returned to the scene of her father's death. Unknown to Tyler, MR. HELL has also returned. To complicate this house of horrors, a group of mercenaries has invaded the lab to steal a deadly vial of bacterium. Many will soon suffer grisly deaths, along with having their eyes(the windows to the soul)harvested by MR. HELL. Written by Jack Rhodes---Executive Producer
Acting in this movie is amateur (makes one wonder what motivated the choice of genre), representing typical, nonetheless exasperating, mix of inadequate feelings (consequently, behavior) and involuntary pauses between lines being filled with either blank or bewildered facial expressions.
Arguably, the plot isn't much worse than that of the "exclusive horror" movie majority, meaning it's plain, predictable and thus, boring (when not silly).
Dialogues complete "Mr. Hell" as a cinematographic disaster, being fragmentary, extremely uninformative and unnatural. Moreover, sadly, the writers chose to uphold the flawed tradition of covering up the lack of scariness with would-be humor, would-be irony and would-be sarcasm, manifested in shabby, overly repetitive "cliché - change of context - touché" form.
The only thing that counts positive is solid B-class photography.