Studio: Shudder
Director: Josh Forbes
Writer: Charles Pieper, Jared Logan, Mike Benner
Producer: Alex Winter, Jonah Ray Rodrigues, Russell Sanzgiri
Stars: Jonah Ray Rodrigues, Alex Winter, Kiran Deol, Christian Calloway, Randee Heller, DeMorge Brown, Jon Daly, Phil Hendrie, Ryan Kattner, Thomas Lennon
Review Score:
Summary:
A frustrated musician descends into a surreal spiral after a neighbor's accidental murder triggers a domino line of seemingly reanimated corpses.
Review:
Any review I write for a horror-comedy can be taken with a grain of salt since I'm traditionally a tough sell whenever those two genres are blended together. Even still, "Destroy All Neighbors" seems like a tougher sell than usual. It's not for the common reasons, which would be painfully unfunny gags or juvenile jokes. It's more that "Destroy All Neighbor's" middling comedy comes from a shoulder-shrugging "eh, is that all this movie's got?" sense of ho-hum humor.
William Brown (Jonah Ray Rodrigues) lives the underachieving life of a stereotypical schlub. He's a simple sound engineer with starry-eyed dreams of making his musical mark in prog rock, a niche that's definitely dying if it's not already dead. By contrast, his girlfriend Emily (Kiran Deol) sees much more success as an attorney, and she's clearly dating below her pay grade by sticking it out with sad sack William.
The two of them are almost literally slumming it in a cramped apartment building whose trampled carpets compete with cracked walls for which has gone longest without a cleaning. The building also keeps its kook factor cranked up to 11 with a whole host of easy-to-describe oddballs who compete with each other for the title of Most Cliched Character.
In order of appearance, notable neighbors include Eleanor (Randee Heller), a horny old landlord dressed like a grandma at Woodstock who takes up William's time by constantly assigning him unpaid handyman tasks. In the process of moving out, Alec was a struggling screenwriter until his erotic sci-fi thriller sold thanks to his father's friend "who wrote a couple Jurassic Parks." Phillip earned the nickname "Pig Man" thanks to the emotional support animal he houses next door. William also gets inspiration from the instructional videos of his guitar hero "Swig" Anderson (Jon Daly), the burnout bassist of a forgotten band whose soberest days are long behind him.
Not to be outdone in the affable weirdo department, the recording studio where William works keeps colorful encounters coming. When he's not spouting Crazy Ralph nuttiness, parking lot hobo Auggie regularly hassles William for a croissant. William's boss Scott (Thomas Lennon) initially appears more receptive than most to William's latest electronic composition. But Scott swiftly boards the bandwagon of insults when coke-crazed, egomaniac artist Caleb Bang Jansen (Ryan Kattner) provides putdowns like only a guy who once had a song on "The OC" can.
Then there's Vlad. Alec's exit opened a vacancy filled by a cross between Tom Savini's "Creepshow 2" Creep and a burly dwarf if The Asylum ever did a mockoff of "Lord of the Rings." Vlad is the quintessential neighbor from Hell, not only disgusting, but disgustingly noisy. And when Eleanor, Emily, and the cops all refuse to do anything about the noxious nuisance, William takes matters into his own hands. Except those matters turn into murder after one of their altercations turns physical, and Vlad is inadvertently impaled before a homemade weightlifting contraption knocks off his noggin for good measure.
Sounds like the end of their newfound feud, but Vlad's violent demise becomes the beginning of new trouble for William. Inexplicably, Vlad's head seemingly reanimates to resume his terrible taunting, and his body parts grow minds of their own, too. William accidentally knocked over a domino line that's going to ripple increasingly outward in wild ways, as dealing with Vlad's boisterous body leads to the creation of more corpses, and no neighbor is safe from William's accident-prone antics when Vlad keeps kickstarting macabre mischief.
Once frenetic activity escalates, "Destroy All Neighbors" shows that it's a back-loaded movie whose second half comes across stronger in both horror and humor than the first half. The support staff sheds their one-note human personalities to turn into ghostly monstrosities who tease, terrorize, and even motivate William to get over his self-made anxieties and finally finish his album. The knock-on effect allows the film to loosen up a little more. It was already askew, yet the full flip into William's possibly insane imagination opens the door to totally surreal splatter and silliness.
I hate writing wrap-ups that open on "like I said" because that merely means I'm repeating myself. I also dislike the label "your mileage may vary" because that applies to virtually every movie, and I feel like I use it too often. But like I said, however, the room temperature humor and rough-edged horror make "Destroy All Neighbors" a YMMV movie if ever there was one.
Speaking for myself, I never laughed out loud once. I don't think I even came close. Smirks curled corners of my mouth here and there, with the first being when Kumail Nanjiani popped up in a quick cameo to rattle off likely improvised lines that landed better than all other dialogue in the preceding half-hour. That's a long time to get to anything close to "good stuff" in a comedy. And when you've got wordplay such as a police chief named Captain Entenille, a reference ready to speed right over the head of anyone born after the 1970s, you're not exactly swimming in gutbuster goofs.
All of these notes bear mentioning because "Destroy All Neighbors" benefits from a precise calibration of a viewer's mindset beforehand, preferably influenced by that person's vice of choice, if you know what I mean. In addition to the style of comedy in store, it's equally worth knowing that "Destroy All Humans" bears visible indie origins. Echoing an earlier reference, the movie's confinement to a few small rooms and 20 feet of hallway makes for modest production value treading somewhere between an old episode of "Tales from the Darkside" and a new episode of "Creepshow." That's not necessarily a knock. Just another thing to keep in mind when considering if "Destroy All Humans" is the right white-label brand of mildly off-the-wall entertainment for you.
Review Score: 50
“Kraven the Hunter” might as well be renamed “Kraven the Explainer,” as it’s much more of an unnecessarily tedious origin story than an action-intensive adventure.