[BD Review] ‘Cell Count’ Tries To Do Too Many Things At Once

Reviewed by Michael Erb

When I saw the poster for this movie, two things immediately popped into my head:

1. This poster directly affects my desire to see this movie.
2. That guy has an anus where his face should be.

Poster aside, Cell Count is a little hard to get a handle on. Tons of ideas are thrown into the narrative without support or explanation. Most of the characters are barely defined, if defined at all. There’s so very little information given on important plot details that the movie eventually loses itself. Logic is introduced an abandon when convenient for the plot. The movie is a sickly mess.

Cell Count begins with Russell by his wife Sadie’s bedside in a hospital, waiting for her to die a slow and expensive death from an unnamed disease. Sadie’s mad scientist physician Dr. Brandt tells Russell about a study he’s conducting that will cure his wife’s disease for free. Russel agrees and at first the cure appears to work. But, there are two inmates involved with the study that Brandt never told anyone about. The previously disease free participants and the sick ones receive matching surgical scars. And there are also the sudden, bloody body transformations of the cured subjects. As the study progresses, Russell and Sadie come to find that the cure is worse than the disease.

The greatest flaw Cell Count suffers is that it’s bursting with ideas that don’t get developed past their introduction. For example: the disease is kept vague. That might seem inconsequential, but it becomes a persistently annoying feature. The characters never name it and its symptoms aren’t clear outside of people coughing and looking sickly. Without any description of what these people are going through, their plight is hard to empathize with.

Additionally, the cure is kept painfully vague. No name, no description of treatment. The only definition the cure receives comes from the horrific body changes that come later in the film. This could be a creative decision to allow viewers to put their own thoughts on what the illness is, but it just smacks of lazy story telling. This vagueness extends to every other aspect of the story. The study participants and thinly characterized outside of a clairvoyant guy, who has the most defined arc of the whole movie. But, his introduction leads to another issue.

There are too many ideas competing with too little development. The cure being a sentient, parasitic life form fights for relevancy with many more ideas that have taken up entire films. One of the convicts is a child molester/murder who went through the earliest stages of the cure testing process. There’s the prophetic young man who’s trying to avert a disastrous future. And then there’s the ending. In the last twenty minutes the story blows up with entirely new ideas about where this facility is located, the later stages of cure transformation, and just how much the disease has ravaged the world. The ending sets up a sequel which is coming out, but it doesn’t conclude the story in any way. There’s no resolution of the threat of the cure or the disease, nor any resolution for the characters. Everyone just gets in place for the next chapter of the Cell Count saga.

There’s also an issue with the complete abandonment of logic that sporadically occurs. Somehow, people with open surgery scars and gunshot wounds in their stomach are walking around like they just sprained something at T Ball practice. The established timetable for the cure to gestate into Cronenberg terrors is ignored so the viewer won’t expect who’s going to transform next. Characters who decide to die in the explosive climax change their minds seemingly because Daniel Baldwin is outside and he has a bus. There’s no consistency to the reasoning and reality of this movie.

The practical gore work looks appropriately sickly. Diseased flesh, open surgery wounds, and a face enveloping skin-flap are disgustingly well done. The brief instances of CGI usage don’t fare as well. It is clear those shots were done for budgetary reasons; they look extraordinarily cheap and they’re used for mere seconds. Overall though, Cell Count isn’t as bloody as you might think. So much time is spent on exposition and the slow build that the gore is limited to a handful of moments.

The cast is mostly competent with precious few noteworthy performances. Robert McKeehen and Haley Talbot as Russell and Sadie share the best work of the film. Separately, the two actors are just as disconnected and uninterested as everyone else in the cast. But as a couple, the pair shows off a nuanced collaboration. The little looks and slight touches they trade make their screen relationship feel real. Otherwise, the majority of the cast shovels out their lines without any real emotion or direction.

You have to admire the ambition of writer/director/editor Todd E. Freeman. With Cell Count, he wants to do a body horror movie, expand the idea into a sci-fi thriller, and setup the sequel to be an epic with a completely different tone. However, instead of developing these ideas, the movie just keeps ramming new wrinkle after new wrinkle into an already overloaded narrative. Cell Count wanted to do a lot with a little and forgot to tell a story along the way. Also, not nearly enough Anus Face.

Cell_Count_2_Banner_1_18_13
Images

Teaser Poster For ‘Cell Count 2: Blood Count’!

I never saw Cell Count, though I loved the poster and so this new news is a reminder for me to check it out. This didn’t take long but The Freeman Brothers have announced Cell Count 2: Blood Count, once again written and directed by Todd E. Freeman.

The new film, “starts where the first film left off and takes our survivors on a high speed journey filled with monsters and fugitives. It is a bloody high octane counterpart to the slow burning original film ‘Cell Count.’

Freeman said in a statement, “I’ve been so excited to get started on the sequel ever since writing the original screenplay for Cell Count. That film was always meant to be the first act in a much bigger story. Blood Count is the second and much more insane act. I liken it to Road Warrior meets Aliens. Not necessarily in story… but most definitely in tone and scope. We are putting the
pedal to the metal and getting bloody. I can’t wait to share what happens next. It’s big, bad, and out of control.

Go here to find a place to watch the first film and then stay up to date on the sequel with their Official Site. READ MORE

Cell_Count_Banner_7_27_12
Indie

FilmBuff Gets Ready To Take Your ‘Cell Count’

Director Todd E. Freeman’s Cell Count, which had been making the festival rounds, has just been picked up for digital distribution by FilmBuff.

In the film, which had its world premiere at the 2012 Fantaspoa Film Festival in Brazil, “Russell Carpenter reluctantly admits his wife Sadie into an experimental treatment facility for her life threatening disease. While locked in this prison like surrounding they, along with 6 others, are unknowingly subjected to a cure that might just be worse than the disease itself.” Robert McKeehen, Haley Talbot, Ted Rooney, John Breen, Adrienne Vogel, Sean McGrath, Eric Reid, Judd Eustice, Eric Newsome, Suzanne Owens-Duval, and Christopher Toyne all star.

Cell Count is co-produced by Polluted Pictures (The Weather Outside) and Wooden Frame Productions (Wake Before I Die). It will next screen at the Macabro Film Festival in August as well as the Sitges Film Festival and Celluloid Screams in October. FilmBuff will release the film across digital platforms in November.

Head inside for the film’s trailer and its rad retro poster. READ MORE

cell_count

Cell Count

Russell Carpenter reluctantly admits his wife Sadie into an experimental treatment facility for her life threatening disease. While locked in this prison like surrounding they, along with 6 others, are unknowingly subjected to a cure that might just be worse than the disease itself.

‘Cell Count’ Cure More Horrible Than The Actual Disease!

1 cell count Cell Count Cure More Horrible Than The Actual Disease!

The Dude Designs has created an awesome retro poster for Todd E. Freeman’s Cell Count, which is currently making the festival rounds. In addition, we’ve also added the official sales trailer that can also be viewed inside.

Russell Carpenter reluctantly admits his wife Sadie into an experimental treatment facility for her life threatening disease. While locked in this prison like surrounding they, along with 6 others, are unknowingly subjected to a cure that might just be worse than the disease itself.

Robert McKeehen, Haley Talbot, Ted Rooney, John Breen, Adrienne Vogel, Sean McGrath, Eric Reid, Judd Eustice, Eric Newsome, Suzanne Owens-Duval, and Christopher Toyne all star. READ MORE

Indie

Check Out The Trailer And Retro Poster For ‘Cell Count’!

CellCountLand31012 Check Out The Trailer And Retro Poster For Cell Count!

I’d been unaware of Cell Count up until today, but that was until I saw this cool poster by Tom Hodge at The Dude Designs. The film is written and directed by Todd Freeman (Wake Before I Die) and stars Robert McKeehen (“Leverage”), Haley Talbot (“Grimm”), Ted Rooney (“Boardwalk Empire”) and Daniel Baldwin.

The film, “is the story of Russell Carpenter, who reluctantly admits his wife, Sadie, into an experimental treatment facility for her life threatening disease. While locked in this prison like surrounding they, along with six others, are unknowingly subjected to a cure that might just be worse than the disease itself.

Cell Count was chosen as the Closing Night Film and to also have its World Premiere at this year’s Fantaspoa Film Festival in Brazil. You can keep up with the film at its official site and Facebook page. Hit the jump for the poster and trailer! READ MORE