Number Rolled: 61
Movie Name/Year: John
Dies at the End (2012)
Genre: Horror
Length: 99
minutes
Rating: R
Affiliated Companies:
M3 Alliance, M3 Creative, Midnight Alliance, Touchy Feely Films
Executive Producer:
Daniel Carey, Dac Coscarelli, Paul Giamatti
Director: Don
Coscarelli
Writer: Don
Coscarelli, David Wong
Actors: Chase
Williamson, Rob Mayes, Paul Giamatti, Clancy Brown, Glynn Turman, Doug Jones,
Fabianne Therese, Jonny Weston, Jimmy Wong, Tai Bennett, Bark Lee
Dave and John are friends. One day, at a party, they’re
introduced to a man who is in possession of a new drug called “soy sauce.” It’s
said that the drug can open people’s minds to places they’ve never even
imagined. The drug, however, is not what people expect and the side effects border
on insane.
John Dies at the End
is based off a book that began as a webserial. Somewhere out there, there’s a
sequel (to the book) and I intend to look up all three of those things.
Let me put this into perspective. On Netflix, in the “More
Like This” section for the film there are four movies that I couldn’t agree
with more; Odd Thomas with its quirky
supernatural core, Detention with its
wibbly-wobbly timey-wimey awesome plot, Rapture-Palooza
which refuses to take itself seriously and Rubber
which is utterly and completely ridiculous. All those descriptions fit John Dies at the End.
I spent a lot of the movie lost, I’ll admit it. However, I
think you’re supposed to spend a lot of the movie lost and questioning things.
In fact, the film even starts with a question that’s meant to get you thinking.
The actors elevated the quirky, insane and ridiculous plot
to something not only watchable, but interesting. Chase Williamson (Video Game High School, Sparks, Complete
Works) and Rob Mayes (The Client
List, Ice Castles, Burning Blue) had amazing friendship chemistry on screen
and I’d happily watch anything they’re in.
To be fair, if you don’t like time-travel or crude comedy
films, this probably isn’t for you. On the other hand, if you like the four
other films I mentioned earlier, you should be very happy with this movie.
Rotten Tomatoes Critic Score – 61%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score – 54%
Netflix’s Prediction for Me – 4.8/5
Trust-the-Dice Score – 4.5/5
P.S. There’s a
scene that plays during the beginning of the credits.
Movie Trailer:
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