As a showreel for the FX house involved, this is impeccable. Does the killer have a day job? What does he do with the bodies? Where are the cops? Even after killing a porn store manager (Todd) in front of a witness, there's no apparent police reaction.
Despite the gore, there's no "realism" here. Movie details 'Prepare yourself for the first American NC-17 horror film.'. We know nothing about most victims any insight into the cause is almost incoherent (was it childhood trauma? His Nazi grandfather? 9/11? Could be any of them) and what he chooses to offer himself, is largely in unsubtitled German. Murder-Set-Pieces (2008) (movie): A fashion photographer exposes his demented childhood and zooms his evil lens on the oldest profession under the moon. And that's the film's main weakness: virtually no emotional content here at all. A photographer (Garrett - who looks much better than he acts) abuses hookers, strippers and finally, little girls. The lack of any real plot description is because there's hardly any. And Jade Risser, playing the young girl who's the only one to see the evil lurking behind the main character's facade, is occasionally impressive, though in other scenes feels painfully artificial. Visually, cinematographer Brendan Flynt delivers a solid look, which captures the neon-glare of Las Vegas very well. And, unlike most extreme horror films, it's shot on 35mm, giving it a sense of legitimate cinema that's often missing.
These aspects really show up Hollywood product like Hostel for the weak, watered-down approach to death that they are compelled to provide. Technically, this is very impressive, with disturbing sequences of murder, torture and rape - the woman getting her throat slit in the bathtub was among the grimmest killings I've seen on celluloid. Star: Sven Garrett, Jade Risser, Valerie Baber, Tony Todd