With Slaughterhouse Rulez director Crispian Mills brings us a dark teen comedy set within the walls of a prestigious private school, where future leaders will be molded and groomed for greatness, but once I realized that the name of the school was actually Slaughterhouse, and not just a nickname, I had a hard time understanding the thought process behind parents sending their kids to such an establishment. One would think the school’s board of directors would have at least thought about rebranding the place to keep the tuitions coming in, and once again we have one of your standard cliched movie schools that has found itself in financial dire straits, much as Disney’s Medfield College was constantly suffering from. In this film, the headmaster of Slaughterhouse, affectionately known as “The Bat” (Michael Sheen), has come up with a solution, one that involved selling the mineral rights of the surrounding land to an unscrupulous fracking company.
Friday, October 11, 2019
Slaughterhouse Rulez (2018) – Review
A horror movie set in an elite boarding school is certainly nothing new – Dario Argento’s Suspiria and its 2018 remake being primary examples of this – but taking that horror setting and then blending it with a comedy element is a nice little twist - casting the likes of Simon Pegg and Nick Frost certainly couldn’t hurt - but it’s the additional serious issues brought to the table, such as closeted homosexuality, bullying, and suicide, that causes the filmmakers of Slaughterhouse Rulez to stumble a tad.
With Slaughterhouse Rulez director Crispian Mills brings us a dark teen comedy set within the walls of a prestigious private school, where future leaders will be molded and groomed for greatness, but once I realized that the name of the school was actually Slaughterhouse, and not just a nickname, I had a hard time understanding the thought process behind parents sending their kids to such an establishment. One would think the school’s board of directors would have at least thought about rebranding the place to keep the tuitions coming in, and once again we have one of your standard cliched movie schools that has found itself in financial dire straits, much as Disney’s Medfield College was constantly suffering from. In this film, the headmaster of Slaughterhouse, affectionately known as “The Bat” (Michael Sheen), has come up with a solution, one that involved selling the mineral rights of the surrounding land to an unscrupulous fracking company.
With Slaughterhouse Rulez director Crispian Mills brings us a dark teen comedy set within the walls of a prestigious private school, where future leaders will be molded and groomed for greatness, but once I realized that the name of the school was actually Slaughterhouse, and not just a nickname, I had a hard time understanding the thought process behind parents sending their kids to such an establishment. One would think the school’s board of directors would have at least thought about rebranding the place to keep the tuitions coming in, and once again we have one of your standard cliched movie schools that has found itself in financial dire straits, much as Disney’s Medfield College was constantly suffering from. In this film, the headmaster of Slaughterhouse, affectionately known as “The Bat” (Michael Sheen), has come up with a solution, one that involved selling the mineral rights of the surrounding land to an unscrupulous fracking company.
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