I take on three more I watched on Tubi that, despite being pretty basic and unoriginal, each delivered a few thrills…and one featured two gay leads!
WORST LAID PLANS (2022)
This 78-minute anthology is just 3 short films assembled together to make a full-length feature, with no wraparound. It consists of two tales that have cool monsters, and a third story that is too determined to deliver a deeper meaning to actually deliver any scares…or monsters. The good news is that all three stories have attractive leading men.
1st story – this one features a gay storyline, landing it on the does the gay guy die? page. A cute guy, who bears a striking resemblance to singer Robbie Williams (the man, not the CGI monkey) and is way too old to be on a trip with his parents…is on a trip with his parents. His dad is a right wing douche, his mother is determined for them to have fun together.
They go on some underground tunnel tour, and the tour guide is also gay, so there’s some nice flirtation. But then, because of an underdeveloped script, it seems as if the tour guide dude basically leads the tour group right into a death trap! WTF? Good news is that the “trap” is a giant killer catfish created old school style, not with CGI. Great monster, great gay characters, weak script.
2nd story – two friends on a road trip encounter a young girl who appears to be in distress at a diner. They end up at a hotel where the RV of the girl and her “father” shows up in the parking lot.
So, the sexy main guy sneaks onto the RV to see if the young girl is okay. This one delivers another cool monster pay-off, plus the simple kind of twist anthology stories need.
3rd story – this final tale is almost twice as long as the other two, and it’s mostly because it consists of too much unnecessary footage a guy takes while on a vacation with his woman.
The gist of the story is that he thinks someone is sneaking into their hotel room at night and filming them, a plot done before in other anthologies with tension and scares, which you don’t get here. This one appears to be more about a man coping with grieving the loss of his son by getting lost in his own footage. It’s dullsville.
HUNTING FOR THE HAG (2023)
This one covers familiar ground, but it’s fun ground, so I was happy to have something easy to watch with some cheap thrills…and with more witch than The Blair Witch Project ever delivered.
A combination of standard third person perspective and found footage, the movie focuses on a group of young women staying at a country house in hopes of catching the legendary “hag” of the woods on film.
We learn about the hag’s backstory during a fireside discussion, and then the friends decide to do a little incantation to conjure her.
This is where the movie takes a turn for a while, but it serves the purpose of delivering a higher body count. A group of scummy redneck hunters shows up, and before you know it, they’re terrorizing the girls. This is the perfect time for a hag to arrive and stand up for other women, but this hag don’t give a shit. She’ll cut a bitch just as soon as hack up a misogynist.
Just note that the hag doesn’t come out to play until 59 minutes into this 85-minute movie. Her look is perhaps just haunted attraction level of creepy, but it served its purpose, especially since we usually only get quick glimpses of her in a flashlight beam. There are also a couple of satisfying kills, my favorite being a head squish. However, the need to add typical found footage camera glitches during all the standout moments—like the head squish—is super frustrating.
SORRY, CHARLIE (2023)
Cutie Colon Tran directs this simple home invasion film that consists of basically two characters and one location.
The idea is that some evil dude is luring women out of their homes using the sound of a crying baby.
It starts on Halloween night as a girl getting drunk and watching Carnival of Souls takes the baby bait and is attacked by a guy with a mask and top hat who very much resembles The Black Phone guy.
I wish the movie had stuck to Halloween night, but instead it’s just an ordinary night from then on. The focus is on a crisis line phone operator trapped in her house and trying to protect herself from the man she believes is after her.
There’s a lot of talk with callers to develop her character, as well as the backstory of “The Gentleman”, as the stalker is known.
There are also plenty of moments of the stalker lurking outside and inside the house, which starts off suspenseful but quickly becomes repetitive since there’s only one character to terrify. It’s not until there are only 13 minutes left that the main/only girl finally takes him on, and based on the twist, this feels like it could have and probably should have been a short film in an anthology rather than a full-length feature.