A man spirals out of control after the death of his wife and he plunges further into despair when a cannibal tells him he should commit suicide.
Submit your review | |
If Blockbuster was still on the high street then Feed Me wouldn't be the type of film I would have walked out with. Ah, Blockbusters followed by the Off Licence, those were the days...
Anyway, Feed Me. It did make me laugh on a few occasions and the horror was more a tense build up that something horrid happening every fifteen minutes. The acting was diligent and respectful given the main protagonists recent loss and the screenplay was something they could both work with.
I did on a few occasions question why I was laughing as it's not something one would generally laugh at, not if you were reading something in the newspapers anyway, so in the end I tried to put it into my head that this was a dark comedy rather than horror and that seemed to lighten me up.
It was quite a long film for what was mostly dialogue and the tension in Feed Me wasn't quite right to drag me through but it's a film so gory that it's not one for those of you with weak stomachs. I can see Feed Me becoming quite a cult hit though, time will tell. Will I watch it again? Very unlikely.