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The Last Horror Movie (2003)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
13 May 2005 (UK) moreTagline:
Wait until you see the final cut...Plot:
A serial killer uses a horror video rental to lure his next victim. What begins as a teen slasher transforms into a disturbing journey through the mind of Max Parry, a mild mannered wedding photographer with a taste for human flesh. | add synopsisAwards:
9 wins & 2 nominations moreNewsDesk:
Last Horror director prepping 3-D zombies and more(From Fangoria. 25 March 2009, 6:26 AM, PDT)
User Comments:
Deserves to be huge moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Kevin Howarth | ... | Max | |
| Mark Stevenson | ... | The Assistant | |
| Antonia Beamish | ... | Petra | |
| Christabel Muir | ... | Sam | |
| Jonathan Coote | ... | John | |
| Rita Davies | ... | Grandma | |
| Joe Hurley | ... | Ben (as Joe Morley) | |
| Jamie Langthorne | ... | Nico | |
| John Berlyne | ... | Phil | |
| Mandy Gordon | ... | Sarah | |
| Jim Bywater | ... | Bill | |
| Lisa Renée | ... | Waitress | |
| Christopher Adamson | ... | Killer (as Chris Adamson) | |
| Adrian Johnson | ... | Kelly | |
| John MacCrossan | ... | Groom |
Additional Details
MPAA:
Rated R for strong brutal violence and language.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
UK:80 minCountry:
UKLanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreCertification:
Germany:18 (JK/SPIO) (cut) | Australia:R (DVD rating) | Finland:K-18 | UK:18 | USA:R | Australia:MA | Norway:15 | Ireland:18 | Germany:BPjM RestrictedFun Stuff
Goofs:
Revealing mistakes: When Max slits the throat of the woman his assistant was supposed to kill, you can clearly see that the knife does not make contact with her throat. moreFAQ
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ames Handel's brilliant script for The Last Horror Movie has a lot to say and does it without preaching or getting heavy handed. It's an uncomfortable film, but a compelling one and that modern day rarity, a horror film that makes you think while scaring the hell out of you. Howarth takes centre stage throughout and is simply amazing as the unreadable Max - he himself admits that he's not mad, but offers no motivation for why he commits his appalling crimes other than that he wants to create the "last horror movie you'll ever see." The Last Horror Movie will work even better on video and DVD than it does on the big screen though one has to wonder what its prospects will be. With no big name stars and the still unshakeable stigma attached to British horror films, this could go unwatched by many who would love its perverse charm and uncompromising violence. And that would be a shame as this is one genre film that deserves to be huge.