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[Sundance Review] ‘Snatchers’ Would Make Sam Raimi Proud!

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As part of Sundance’s growing inclusion of television, the Midnight Episodics series showcased the first season of the digital series Snatchers. This horror-comedy is a total hoot and has fun with absurd gore and body horror.

Right away Snatchers looks more cinematic than some feature films, and certainly a lot of television, let alone digital short series. Framed in 2.35:1 widescreen, Snatchers has style and composition whether it’s two people talking or chaotic bloodshed.

Sara (Mary Nepi) has sex with her boyfriend Skyler (Austin Fryberger), and ends up pregnant the next day, and gives birth to a monster the next. The creature has a body snatchers/puppet masters quality where it can attach to humans and control them. Meanwhile, Sara is still pregnant and trying not to birth another snatcher.

Snatchers is clearly inspired by Sam Raimi. If the angles and zooming didn’t make it clear, a character actually says “groovy.” The gore scenes would make Ash proud. The birth scene explodes with Evil Dead-worthy splatter, and a climactic siege is gleefully full of indiscriminate gunplay.

It’s also a horny teen comedy. The young cast nails the tone of big broad farce. Skyler is a dumb buff dude bro. Sara is a lovely high school girl who wanted to lose her virginity and now fears her mom (J.J. Nolan) finding out she got pregnant (as if the whole 48 hour incubation period wouldn’t give her some leeway), not to mention the whole monsters ripping heads off. Her friends Hayley (Gabrielle Elyse) and Kiana (Ashly Argota) are adorable dealing with this absurd premise as if it’s standard teen crisis.

[Related] Keep up with all of our 2017 Sundance Film Festival coverage

There’s a bit of an Edgar Wright tone as well with quick cut montages that speed through practical matters like the ultrasound. The fast dialogue makes mater of fact lines hilarious. Like the cop telling Sara “I don’t believe you” is perfect deadpan, as if he should even consider believing this story. The teens have some clever twists on Twitterspeak, like saying “WTF*ck” thereby using the expletive the abbreviation was intended to hide. Sara also uses Juno as a verb.

Within all this craziness, the characters are actually sympathetic. You root for Sara. You don’t want her to get hurt or be responsible for hurting others, and she deserves to get to have a first time without all this drama. This crisis also reunites friendships Sara had neglected due to high school peer pressures and that’s sweet.

The creature is practical when it’s attached to people, so it’s always nice to see a physical effect. It’s probably digital when it detaches and springs around the room but there’s enough of a mix that it totally works.

There’s clearly more to Snatchers. The origin of the creature has not entirely been confirmed by the end, and there’s a big teaser. I already want to see more Snatchers and these first eight play well as a standalone movie. But before there’s a season two, everyone will have to watch Snatchers on Stage 13.

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Anna Faris & Regina Hall Promise ‘Scary Movie’ Will “Offend Everyone;” New Images Revealed

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The Wayans are out to cancel the Cancel Culture with Scary Movie, and the cast assures it will do just that.

“They sort of have an across-the-board style,” Anna Faris tells EW. “It’s always been a part of the Wayans Brothers, their electricity. ‘Can we offend you? Will you still love us? Come on, you still love us, don’t you?'”

Regina Hall concurs, promising the “boundary-pushing” sixth installment in the horror parody franchise will “offend everyone.”

EW has shared a batch of behind-the-scenes images from Scary Movie, which hits theaters June 5 via Paramount.

Faris and Hall are joined by fellow franchise favorites Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans, Dave Sheridan, Lochlyn Munro, Cheri Oteri, Chris Elliott, and Jon Abrahams in the legacy sequel.

The ensemble includes Damon Wayans Jr., Gregg Wayans, Kim Wayans, Benny Zielke, Cameron Scott Roberts, Heidi Gardner, Olivia Rose Keegan, Ruby Snowber, Savannah Lee Nassif, Sydney Park, Kenan Thompson, and Felissa Rose.

Michael Tiddes (A Haunted House) directs from a script by Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans, original Scary Movie director Keenen Ivory Wayans, Craig Wayans (Scary Movie 2), and Rick Alvarez (A Haunted House).

The film will slash through reboots, remakes, requels, prequels, sequels, spin-offs, elevated horror, origin stories, anything with the word legacy in it, and everyfinal chapterthat absolutely isn’t final.

Scary Movie launched in 2000, followed by Scary Movie 2 in 2001. The Wayans’ involvement ended there, but the series continued with 2003’s Scary Movie 3, 2006’s Scary Movie 4, and 2013’s Scary Movie 5.

Regina Hall & Marlon Wayans on the set of ‘Scary Movie.’ Credit: Paramount Pictures.

Anna Faris on the set of ‘Scary Movie.’ Credit: Paramount Pictures.

Marlon Wayans & Regina Hall on the set of ‘Scary Movie.’ Credit: Paramount Pictures.

Michael Tiddes & Anna Faris on the set of ‘Scary Movie.’ Credit: Paramount Pictures.

Marlon Wayans on the set of ‘Scary Movie.’ Credit: Paramount Pictures.

Regina Hall & Anna Faris on the set of ‘Scary Movie.’ Credit: Paramount Pictures.

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