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| Feast II: Sloppy Seconds | 
enlarge | Director: John Gulager Actors: Clu Gulager, Jennifer Wade, Diane Goldner Studio: Weinstein Company Category: DVD
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $9.44 You Save: $10.54 (53%)
New (47) Used (16) Collectible (1) from $9.12
Avg. Customer Rating: 31 reviews Sales Rank: 4268
Format: Color, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Subtitled) Rating: Unrated Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 97 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: WEID81553D UPC: 796019815536 EAN: 0796019815536 ASIN: B001CDFY64
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 Release Date: October 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: ******BRAND NEW****** ** Over 1.5 million orders shipped worldwide and more than 500 000 items in stock, BUY FROM A TRUSTED SOURCE, ESTABLISHED SINCE 1998 - INETVIDEO ~~~
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Product Description Studio: Genius Products Inc Release Date: 10/07/2008 Rating: Ur
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| Customer Reviews: Read 26 more reviews...
oooooover the top! October 6, 2008 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
I really enjoyed the first FEAST - but this was amazing! Wow, talk about over the top! If you want to be critical, you could pull just about any movie to pieces - but horror? This movie is fun. This movie is gory, offensive, far fetched, etc. This is a movie for company - beer and pizza for sure.
Entertaining, offensive, and bloody - Worthy of a look October 7, 2008 5 out of 8 found this review helpful
In a small desert town, the few survivors of a bar brawl with a few vicious monsters team up with some locals to, once again, survive the monstrous onslaught.
Project Greenlight-winner John Gulager returns to the director's chair with this straight-to-video sequel to his cult hit Feast. The first gained notoriety due to its production on Bravo's filmmaking series Project Greenlight, which gave Feast a nice run of credit names including Ben Affleck, Matt Damon, and Wes Craven. I very much loved the first one, and consider it a modern-day Evil Dead, due to its cult fame and part of a future trilogy. That reputation, however, now relied on Feast II also being a hit (cult or otherwise). In comparison to the first in general filmmaking, it pales. The acting, writing, and direction have all gone a bit downhill, though only some of the acting is terrible and the rest of it being at least acceptable. Another problem stood with the character introductions. They were changed up from the quickfire style in the first film, and now seemed like Monday Night Football player intros. Some of them were a bit long and really took the viewer out of the action. While the film doesn't live up to the first in general quality, it does maintain all of what the first was great at: over-the-top gore & violence, sex & nudity, foul language, rubber suited creatures, non-stop action, and hilariously one-dimensional characters. If those kind of things don't work for you, neither will this film. The gore was great and endless, and the violence was brutally gruesome (and often offensive). While it could've used another hot chick or two, the cast fit the roles well, even if some of their performances left quite a bit to be desired. Also, the ending will leave many (including me) somewhere between annoyed, frustrated, and simply wanting more. Luckily, none of the problems were enough to ruin the film and if you're a fan of the first or just looking for some mindlessly bloody entertainment chock-full of biker chicks, super-strength monsters, and wrestling midgets, I can definitely recommend Feast II: Sloppy Seconds.
Final verdict: 6.5/10. I'll be impatiently awaiting Feast 3: The Happy Finish
Note: The writing team of Melton and Dunstan have penned the script for the upcoming Hellraiser reboot, along with the upcoming Saw V.
-AP3-
The first DVD i've ever thrown away.. October 10, 2008 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
Absolutely terrible.
I was a big fan of FEAST and couldn't comprehend how the same team made FEAST 2. The monsters are no longer scary, the effects look cheap, the acting is terrible and unless you like vile and ugly women vomiting on one another do NOT watch this movie. It's more than a waste of your 90 minutes.
Throwing this movie away was an insult to the garbage can.
Feast 2: Sloppy Sequel October 11, 2008 5 out of 8 found this review helpful
I'm being kind with the title actually. I found the first "Feast" to be a pretty entertaining if not overly campy, gory horror flick. This sequel is abysmal. Not one likable character. The creatures look sillier. The acting and dialogue are laughable. Skip this if you do not enjoy unintelligent inane garbage.
Another Sequel That Sucks October 8, 2008 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
Project Greenlight 3 winner John Gulager's campy horror flick Feast was released in a handful of midnight screenings in 2005 before heading to DVD where it picked up cult classic status, prompting the studio to throw a back-to-back deal (not to mention buckets of more money) at the team for the sequel and third installment of the trilogy. Shot in 2007 on location, Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds (released today on DVD) and Feast 3: Happy Ending (coming in 2009) boast a larger cast of even more unknowns than the first (Jenny Wade is the biggest star, returning to lead a truckload in this "war"), more blood, more gore, and more chance to see the monster-villains on-screen... unfortunately all that excess proves to just be superfluous. Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds suffers from the lack of imagination, creativity, and ingenuity with which the first of the series soared to success; Feast 2 lacks the heart of the independent story it once was, proving once again that the extra money and inflated egos of studio films can kill a franchise.
Randy (Jamie Kennedy) from Wes Craven's Scream once said that in trilogies "all bets are off." Since the series has a clear-cut end, certain characters-- even the leads-- don't have to be kept alive for countless resurrections down the road. It seems Gulager took this advice to heart with Feast 2, opening on the morning after the initial attack in a town nearby where the creatures are now invading a whole new group of people. He throws the picture he painted in Feast out the window not only by ignoring what happened to the car of survivors that took off at dawn (Balthazar Getty must have been too busy with his TV drama and his real life personal drama to return his calls, and his working relationship with Krista Allen was definitely not positive enough to warrant her return) but also by deeming some events and their subsequent title cards false by having a character or two "not be dead after all" (I love Judah Friedlander more than the next girl, but his death was awesome, and his reemergence compromises the rules Feast set forth). A cop out way just to fill the cast with your friends and family, if you ask me, and isn't that what the studio was trying to avoid the first time around? Feast's dollar success was not great enough to allow the granting of complete power to a still-green director who, judging by the auteurship of this film, will most likely have to head back to the world of wedding videos come 2010. What was so clever and refreshing about Feast was how Gulager made the most of what he had. He wasn't given all the fanciest FX equipment or the biggest budget for CGI. He made an old-school monster movie, with puppeteers on set, steering the hand-crafted rubber beings. He sprayed plenty of blood on his actors and the camera lens, but first and foremost, he crafted well-developed characters and dialogue, using the carnage as a visual aid, but not relying on it to carry the film. Feast 2, however, speaks to the lowest common denominator, as if everything about the filmmaking process was rushed. Between visual gags, toilet humor, and cheap costumes (seeing more of the monsters just showed the dudes in their latex suits), the budget may have doubled, but the production value has been cut off at the knees. There is a lot of the S16mm handheld "home movie" footage in this sequel, but unfortunately shooting such shots at night and "on the move" just provide dark, grainy, and offensive results-- not just to the filmmaker in me but also to the fan.
Actually Gulager's brand of humor has always been borderline, but in Feast 2 he takes it a bit too far, once again probably just drunk on the power of being in control. There are a lot of slapstick jokes at Martin Klebba's expense, and there is a scene with a baby that caused my jaw to hit the floor and my finger to hit the stop button on my DVD player. This film is nothing like the original, and if you are one of the few diehard supporters of the first, like me, you definitely should not ruin your opinion of the story by viewing this mess. Gulager himself should not have ruined the integrity of the story by making this mess!
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