On the last day of school, two bullied teenagers decide to take revenge on their tormentors.
Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Jürgen Prochnow | ... | Harold Lewis | |
Michael Paré | ... | Will Prat | |
Patrick Muldoon | ... | Ryan Brennan | |
Birkett Turton | ... | Daniel Lynne (as Kett Turton) | |
Elisabeth Moss | ... | Robin Walters | |
Maria Conchita Alonso | ... | Mrs. Jones | |
Clint Howard | ... | Artie Lynne | |
Brendan Fletcher | ... | Ricky Herman | |
Lochlyn Munro | ... | Reporter | |
Maeve Quinlan | ... | Becky Schultz | |
Elisabeth Rosen | ... | Dara McDermott | |
Will Sanderson | ... | Frank | |
G. Michael Gray | ... | Wex Presley | |
Kevin Mundy | ... | Tommy Bruno | |
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Michael Belyea | ... | Barry Schultz |
On the last day of school, two bullied teenagers decide to take revenge on their tormentors.
I understand this is one of Uwe Boll's better films, which is like saying Auschwitz was one of Hitler's better concentration camps.
Every moment and every character is horribly cliché'd, and nothing is terribly interesting.
Like all Americans, I'm somewhat protective of my country, and if you're going to make a film about America from an outside perspective, you better have something interesting to say. If all you can do is repeat endless clichés that other have already said, that's not art and that's not insight, it's just insult.
And insulted is how I feel after watching this film.
Oh, and the main theme music is a ripoff of Led Zeppelin.