Sumeet Dang, and
Bryan Dodds. Yeah, this isn t the most original idea, but that creepy old dead guy haunting him makes this look like something unique and, dare I say, kind of fun. Freaky and disturbing, but with some awkward fun tossed in. Why not? It s the horror genre after all.
Here s the official trailer (+ poster) for Michael P. Blevins
Digging to Death, direct from YouTube:
David (Ford Austin) buys a fixer-upper house to restore and as he’s digging a hole for a new septic tank, he discovers a large box filled with three million dollars in cash and a dead body. He is faced with the dilemma of reporting the body and losing the money or hiding the money and reburying the body some place else. What unfolds next is a series of consequences that lead us to truly discover What’s Buried in the Backyard.
Ratings info(May contain spoilers)
There is strong language ( f k , motherf ker ) throughout, as well as milder terms including pussy , shit , bastard , dick and son of a bitch .
There are scenes of supernatural threat, when a man is haunted in his home by an animate corpse. Other scenes of threat include a woman being abducted and threatened by her father.
Scenes of violence include a man beating another man to death with a hammer, and killing his friend with a drill. Violence is sometimes accompanied by bloody injury detail.
There are moderate sex and drug references.
Home Entertainment
What’s new to VOD and streaming this weekend
Including reviews of A Glitch In The Matrix, Falling, Malcolm & Marie, Rams and Greenland By Norman Wilner
N
OW critics pick what’s new to streaming and VOD for the weekend of February 5. Plus: Everything new to VOD and streaming platforms.
Falling
(Viggo Mortensen)
Mortensen’s first feature as a writer/director finds the actor shaping a simple father-son story into a powerful meditation on compassion at any cost. It’s not perfect, but it’s powerful. Mortensen plays John, a gay man who’s taken a week off to bring his ailing father Willis (Lance Henriksen) out west from his rural New York farm. Willis is suffering from dementia and rapidly deteriorating, and John is looking to make things easier on the old man – but Willis’s illness has only amplified the fury, misogyny and homophobia that drove his family away decades earlier. Falling is rough in the way that first films can be, but even when something doesn