Obviously a sense of humour is needed for this one. The movie starts out 17 years before 1986 or so, as a young boy watches his father do some fishing out on the lake, and listening to some music on an ancient tape recorder. Are you really ready for a maniacal fisherman? Playing out like a checklist of the slashers that came before it, Blood Hook opens with the requisite prologue that sets up the action. Sometime when your not in the mood for a really serious movie anyway. Which is when Evelyn barges into the house to shout about vibrations messing with people's heads! The big idea and what drives the killer is downright absurd.
We also catch a glimpse of some grisly waterlogged corpses that he also keeps around, seemingly for his own amusement. Please help to establish notability by citing that are of the topic and provide significant coverage of it beyond a mere trivial mention. So Finner gets drunk and rides out on the lake to drown his sorrows, but not kill anyone, and crank the music. But he wusses out and sits there doing nothing, until the sun comes up and Leudke heads out to do some fishing. Finner just so happens to catch Denny's fish, and also runs back into Bev D.
Hell, I knew this dude in Clevelend with a steel pelvis? If they were preserving that mystery, it doesn't last long, and I'm not going to preserve it. So Peter rows out into the lake with the boom box like the worst Say Anythying rip off ever and waits for the cicadas to do their thing. D tells Finner to bring his muskie to her house so it won't get stolen. Also, our main pack of characters stumble across a local girl who lives in the woods with her baby, whom she apparently leaves on his own while she goes out for a run. Leudke is indeed the killer, driven mad by a metal plate in his head, and the vibrations from the music combined with the cicadas chirping.
Runtime: 85 mins Director: Jim Mallon Writer: Larry Edgerton, John Galligan Cast: Mark Jacobs, Lisa Jane Todd, Patrick Danz Genre: Horror Comedy Tagline: Blood Sports of the Human Kind. Little does he know that the true killer is armed with a good-sized hook and an even sturdier fishing rod with which to choke people out with before yanking them into the lake. Wisconsin is preparing for its most important event in recent history. That may be unique, I don't recall seeing a fisherman slasher movie before. And there's also a Kevin Murphy deep behind the scenes.
There's no closure, no bad guy dead or captured, and the only thing this movie accomplished was to tell Pete who killed his dad! Wayne tries to accuse Leudke at the festival, and the sheriff drags him off, because it just looks like he's once again being jealous over the friendly competition. Two titans of tusseldom, locked in combat for the ages, hooked by each other's lures! So Peter and Eve poke around the bait shop to try and find anything tangible. Which is something actually banned by classical music, because it supposedly drove people crazy. Click to go back to my Troma page. I got what I expected and a few unexpected laughs to go along with it. And by that, I mean that the killer tosses out his Blood Hook onto the boat, and catches the guy right in the nuts. And there's still a lot of quirky actors and characters, so it may be coherent, it's still plenty goofy, like all the best Triskings are.
Unsourced material may be challenged and. And this killer has a really good arm. There have been maniac cops, medicine men and miners. Nearly 30 minutes of scenes are cut from the original film. That's your lesson for the day. And if anything, the graininess adds to the charm. It soon becomes apparent, however, that a psychotic serial killer has also decided to join the festivities.
Also, watching it, I couldn't help but notice how much better looking it is than most low-budget horror films. He's a good guy, if a bit shell shocked at times, and very loyal to friends and family. This is something to watch with your fishing buddies after a day of fishing. This may be a silly movie, but I cannot stress enough how much I like the various things going on converging into an actually coherent plot. My only quibble is this is an idea that someone needs to improve upon.
If notability cannot be established, the article is likely to be , , or. It's fairly well made, the acting has that no budget charm to it, and even has a few brief moments of brilliant filmmaking. Sara Hauser is also seen multiple times in her bathing suit. Il prodottodescrive La avventura di un ratto divertente di nome Sira in una luogo mini in scopo per scoprire le luogo mancante di Ditun. As far as plot goes, I seem to remember it as: back in the sixties or seventies, a young boy sees his grandfather killed by an unseen to us killer, who appears when music plays and is accompanied by a creepy hissing noise. There's plenty of evidence, and too many missing bodies, as the rest of the cast catches up with Pete's suspicions. They're really the same thing but in one there's a killer.
I can't decide if this is a weird thing to ask or not. This horror comedy — about a mad and menacing fisherman who decides to hunt humans instead of fish — amps up the humor and the blood to provide an unexpected blast of a kooky horror film. Although it is a little awkward how every single necessary person to build up this reveal just so happens to wander into the Van Clease place with their puzzle piece But they know the sheriff won't investigate the disappearances, or the well respected Leudke, without evidence. The of course ends up being true, as the kids are not only damned to the hell that is rural towns obsessed with fishing, but also the bloodthirsty maniac that stalks the lake and reels victims in with a giant fishing hook. But Rodney finishes his chat, and heads out on the lake to listen to tunes and catch some rays, and find more fishing lures. That sort of blatant disregard for logic is indicative of how Blood Hook treads the waters of absurdity.