Albino Farm
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Albino Farm | |
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Directed by |
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Written by |
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Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | René Jung |
Edited by | Dan O'Brien |
Music by | Scott Rockenfield[2] |
Distributed by | Anxiety Island Entertainment |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes[3] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Albino Farm is a 2009 horror film written and directed by Joe Anderson[4] and Sean McEwen.[5] It stars Chris Jericho, Richard Christy, Tammin Sursok, and Alex Neustaedter.
Plot
[edit]In the small town of Shiloh, two boys on bicycles ride through the woods up to the gates of the legendary Albino Farm. The oldest goes in and the youngest stays outside. The oldest boasts he isn't scared of anything, and then a figure leaps out and drags him into the woods.
The film cuts to Stacey, Melody, Brian, and Sanjay driving down a forest road, working on a history research project about backwoods American customs and legends. They almost hit someone, whom they initially take to be a young boy, scraping roadkill off the asphalt. To their sudden fright, the "child" turns out to be a dwarf who turns his head, with an unsettling countenance.
When they walk back to their SUV, they see they have a flat tire. They keep driving until they see a gas station with the local man Jeremiah out front, who is blind. They talk to him and he talks eccentrically and incoherently, with a biblical turn. They acquire a tire to replace the flat one; Brian, the jerk of the group, deliberately underpays Jeremiah.
The students continue their trip and stop at a white tent pitched in a field. Melody and Brian head up to investigate and are greeted by another local with a harelip who tells them about the Albino Farm and alludes that it may be a legend. There's a revival meeting in the tent, and the harelipped man strongly suggest that they receive salvation. The foursome keeps driving until they reach the old-fashioned town of Shiloh. They stop at a diner and eat, as night falls. They're served by a friendly, buxom waitress whom Brian and Sanjay knock themselves out over until they note that she has deformed hands, with clawlike fingers. Brian and Melody go looking for the Albino Farm while Sanjay and Stacey talk to an old woman inside an old church who suspiciously and unconvincingly tells them there is no such thing as the Albino Farm. Retreating to a back room, Stacey and Sanjay enter to see the woman breastfeeding a hideously deformed baby.
Meanwhile, Melody and Brian ask a small boy, who communicates via chalkboard, where the Albino Farm is. He tells them to ask a group of unruly and somewhat disgusting teens in a car. There they meet Levi and his two deaf friends, who agree to take them to the Albino Farm for twenty-five dollars and a view of Melody's breasts. After a minor argument, Melody reluctantly agrees, and they head off to the Albino Farm. The teens drive crazily, causing Melody to vomit. They stop in front of the gates to the farm and get into an argument. A fight between Levi and Brian breaks out and the teens drive away after flipping them off. Brian and Melody enter an old house and Brian sees a person and chases after them, with Melody following. Brian gets his leg caught in a bear trap.
Sanjay and Stacey go looking for their friends and ask the same boy for directions. After driving to the farm with the boy as a guide, who bikes away after they arrive. They find a hysterical Melody, and she leads them to where she had last saw Brian, but he is gone. He had been captured and brought to a house inhabited by strange, horribly deformed people—one with a tongue protruding from a rosebud mouth, one with a pinhead, and several of them pig-like. The "Pig Bitch" reveals her cleavage and does a striptease for Brian, who rejects her. She then takes a meat hook and shoves it through Brian's mouth and cheek.
Melody, Sanjay, and Stacey, after hearing their car alarm, run back to their car to see that it has been oddly vandalized. Sanjay's camera, luckily, catches the perpetrator, who had also taken their luggage. The three go searching for Brian and find their luggage in a clearing, along with other people's. They then see a tree hung with skulls and bones. Going ballistic, Melody runs back through the woods, only to get attacked by the deformed pig people and have her neck snapped.
Stacey and Sanjay find a dilapidated shack and enter cautiously. They see Brian in a chair with his back to them and approach him quietly, only to realize that he's dead. The pig people arrive at the shack and barricade the door. One of them breaks through the wall, but Sanjay hits him in the arm with an axe. The shack catches fire; Stacey and Sanjay flee into the woods. They discover Melody hanging upside down in the bone tree. They run, and the crazed, deformed clan chases them. They hide behind a tree, letting the killers pass without seeing them, but the killers wind up finding them and force them to continue running. They soon bump into the Pig Bitch, who knocks them out and captures them.
They wake up in a cave and find their arms sewn together. They hobble away and stumble upon the pig people's cave campsite. One sees them, and the pair race away. They light a torch and try to rip their arms apart. They gorily succeed. They try to escape, but are attacked by the Pig Bitch. Stacey jabs the torch into her face, forcing her to let go, and they get away. Sanjay ends up falling into a chasm. Stacey climbs down into the chasm and consoles, him and then turns on some propane tanks when Pig Bitch attacks Stacey with a meat hook. Stacey and Pig Bitch fight.
The rest of the monsters arrive, and Sanjay comes to and reaches for the torch. Pig Bitch and Stacey choke each other, and Stacey rips out some of Pig Bitch's hair. Stacey then picks up the meat hook and slashes Pig Bitch's throat before repeatedly stabbing her with the hook. Sanjay then heroically lights the torch, killing himself and a good number of the deformed people, and Stacey runs out of the cave as an explosion ensues, knocking her out.
Stacey wakes up as dawn breaks and runs into the woods before reaching a field. She drops the meat hook as she comes upon the same white tent where a church congregation is meeting. She hysterically runs in and tries to explain what has happened. The preacher, who takes off his sunglasses and reveals abnormally light (albino) eyes, laughs with the rest of the congregation. The congregation is composed of people who are deformed as well—not as horribly as the Albino Farm residents, but in the unsettling way of a freak show—Siamese twin sisters, another suckling deformed baby, a man with a stretched-out smile, another with a fat, pasty face, and the dwarf encountered earlier. As Stacey cries, "My God, its the whole town!" the preacher quotes the passage about the sins of the fathers visiting the children. The audience, visibly amused, sings on, with Stacey, who by now is completely over the edge, grins widely and manically.
Cast
[edit]- Tammin Sursok as Stacey[6]
- Chris Jericho as Levi[7]
- Richard Christy as Caleb[8]
- Duane Whitaker as Jeremiah[9]
- Alex Neustaedter as Samuel[10]
- Sunkrish Bala as Sanjay[11]
- Nick Richey as Brian[12]
- Alicia Lagano as Melody
- Kevin Spirtas as Preacher[13]
- Christopher Michael White as Jacob
- Bianca Barnett as Pig Bitch[14]
- Paul Ford as Old Dwarf[15]
- Shelby Janes as Shelby
- Joicie Appell as Ruth
- Jackson Curtis as Mute Boy
- Troy Dunkle as Pin Head
- Ryan Shields as Big Eye
- Mike Strain Jr. as Smash Face
- Barry Curtis as Split Lip
- Beth Graveman as Bird Girl
Production
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (March 2016) |
Albino Farm was shot in Marionville, Missouri.[16] It was also filmed in nearby Warrensburg and just outside Willard. The film is loosely based on a legend about college students exploring to the Ozark Mountains, who never came back from the Springlawn Farm.[17][18]
Make-up and special effects
[edit]The costumes and make-up were created by special effects and makeup artist Jason Barnett.[19]
Release
[edit]The film was released by MTI Home Video on September 22, 2009[20] with a time from 90 minutes,[21] the German FSK 18 DVD runs 85 minutes.[22]
Reception
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2016) |
Dread Central panned the film, awarding it a score of 1 1/2 out of 5, writing "Albino Farm can be summed up in one word: “unremarkable”. An unremarkable script, unremarkable score, unremarkable cinematography, unremarkable (and even occasionally downright poor) editing and direction, and a swimming-through-treacle first two acts all conspire to remove any possibility of a recommendation. Once the violence kicks off it's relatively entertaining, but I wouldn't blame you if you can't make it that far".[23] Kurt Dahlke from DVD Talk gave the film a negative review, complimenting the film's make-up but criticized the film's lack of originality, and overuse of teen horror clichés.[24]
References
[edit]- ^ "Albino Farm Arrives On DVD". Archived from the original on 2012-09-05. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Albino Farm - Bryan Reesman.com". Archived from the original on 2010-05-27. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ "ALBINO FARM - MTI Video". Archived from the original on 2010-02-16. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ Albino Farm (V), Upcoming September 22, 2009, Poster, Synopsis and New Trailer
- ^ "Albino Farm DVD Details". Archived from the original on 2009-07-23. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ "Update: DVD Details & Art for Albino Farm". Archived from the original on 2009-07-19. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ unclecreepy (17 July 2009). "Albino Farm Details Emerge". Dread Central.
- ^ "ALBINO FARM creators talk new website, DVD, sequel?". Archived from the original on 2009-04-25. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ "ALBINO FARM DVD art and details". Archived from the original on 2009-07-20. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ Moore, Debi (28 February 2012). "Casting Update, New Poster, and More Stills from DefTone Pictures Studios' Ombis". Dread Central.
- ^ "Albino Farm Movie Review at Hollywood Video". Archived from the original on 2009-08-30. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ "Albino Farm Official Site & Trailer". Archived from the original on 2009-04-18. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ alt="">, <img src="//1 bp blogspot com/_BPgE2pUpnVw/SdwQpfN9_SI/AAAAAAAAAIQ/km6p8HJ1D4U/s35/Snapshot%2Bof%2Bme%2B4 png" width="35" height="35" class="photo". "Albino Farm: Cast Information and Teaser". Archived from the original on May 27, 2010.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Albino Farm Bianca Barnett7". 30 October 2007 – via Flickr.
- ^ "千赢国际网站-千赢国际官方网站-千赢国际唯一官方网站". www.mystrangeblog.com.
- ^ ""Albino Farm" film location - Marionville, Missouri - movie / film / TV location". wikimapia.org.
- ^ "Springlawn Farm (Albino Farm) - Underground Ozarks". www.undergroundozarks.com.
- ^ "What is the Legend of the "Albino Farm"?". 17 August 2007. Archived from the original on 17 August 2007.
- ^ "First Look: 'Albino Farm' FX Maestro Talks to B-D!". Archived from the original on 2010-05-28. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ "Icons of Fright News and Updates: ALBINO FARM On DVD September 22nd!". iconsoffright.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-09-30.
- ^ New Releases - Albino Farm R (MPAA) / MTI Home Video / DVD[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "OFDb - DVD: Artgore / Sunfilm Entertainment (Deutschland), Freigabe: FSK Keine Jugendfreigabe/ab 18 von Albino Farm (2009)". OFDb.
- ^ Jones, Gareth (30 July 2009). "Albino Farm (2009) - Dread Central". Dread Central.com. Gareth Jones. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
- ^ Dahlke, Kurt. "Albino Farm : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". DVD Talk.com. Kurt Dahlke. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
External links
[edit]- 2009 films
- 2009 independent films
- Films about cannibalism
- Films set in Missouri
- 2009 horror films
- Horror films based on actual events
- American independent films
- American slasher films
- 2000s English-language films
- 2000s American films
- 2000s slasher films
- English-language horror films
- English-language independent films