UNLIMITED STREAMING
WITH PRIME VIDEO
TRY 30-DAY TRIAL
Home > Horror >

Perkins' 14

Perkins' 14 (2009)

January. 09,2009
|
5
|
R
| Horror Thriller

Ronald Perkins builds an army of 14 people brainwashed through cult-like methods to protect him from his parents' killers. When Perkins is imprisoned, the police unwittingly unleash his followers on a small town and they've only got one thing on their mind: "Kill for Mr. Perkins."

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

viofitz
2009/01/09

For once I thought this film is telling a father who will manage to fight his own fear to understand the situation of his son from being one of a perkin's victim. Yet I was wrong, he's weaker than he looks... The first scene till the middle scene is clearly shown that he's great & I'm startin' to admire his bravery. However, in the middle to the end the father become completely an idiot by letting a prisoner go out by herself, killing his partner for being weak in the critical situation, her wife crawling alone I thought he will accompany her from behind in darkness, & for being weak with his son. I understand for his feeling but need to know that the son is missing around 10 years so it would be hard to recognize his father since the son is still a little brat when he's kidnapped, also his mind is totally screwed. Ahh... Honestly I really like this movie actually in the beginning but hate it when going to the end, it's so terrible for the character's roles.... Overall the movie itself is not so bad from the environment even though the camera angle sucks, & what I really like is the prologue... The case of the father for missing his son is totally outstanding, & the middle of the movie were good. Also the mother is hot, too bad she's a slut! Then the followed scene to the last at the building were sucks as hell! The ending came to be like that, so is there any plan for a sequel? I think it will need for exterminating + mutilate the 14 victims....

More
lovecraft231
2009/01/10

One a night shift, deputy sheriff Dwayne Hopper (Patrick O'Kane) finds out some terrible things about Ronald Perkins (Richard Brake) and the disappearance of 14 children-one of whom was Hopper's son. Well, Hopper kills Perkins in a fit of rage, and the next thing you know 14 nearly unstoppable zombie like killers cause mayhem in town with only one thing in mind-kill for Perkins.While it sounds great, "Perkins 14" is a mess from the get go. How could a movie with such an inventive premise go wrong? Well, for starters, the acting (save for Brake, whose performance as Perkins is bone chilling) is universally awful and largely amateur at best. While it's satisfyingly gory and has some decent moments in direction (I love the use of color schemes which bring to mind directors such as Argento, Bava and Fulci), the script is terrible and ends up being uninteresting, while the conclusion is too anti-climactic, the plot-holes are too gaping, the characters are uninteresting and the editing and score are jarring. I could go on really.So why am I giving it 3? Because it's at least original, has some nice gore and has a few interesting moments. In the end though, it reminded me somewhat of another bad horror movie I've reviewed called "Frozen Scream" in that it has a great premise, yet it all goes to waste and feels like a letdown.This is also the 4th of this years "8 Films To Die For" I've seen so far. As of now, the gory and blackly comic "Autopsy" is the only one that I've enjoyed, as the others have been decent but disappointing ("The Brøken "), a total mess (the film reviewed within) and pedestrian and dull ("Dying Breed.") So far, this years Horrorfest has mostly been a letdown. Too bad really. Maybe the next one will have more good entries. If not, then maybe they should just stop now.

More
Scarecrow-88
2009/01/11

A deeply sorrowful policeman, Dwayne Hopper(Patrick O'Kane)had a son kidnapped as did thirteen other families and the man responsible he discovers was picked up on a speeding charge. The man is Ronald Perkins(Richard Brake), a pharmacist who's "friends with the judge", but some particular comments he makes to Dwayne(..along with a missing finger)throws up signals that he was the one who kidnapped his son. Pleading with an off-duty cop to investigate Perkins' home, policeman Hal(Dean Sansone)hears noise in the basement and discovers a hidden room containing prison cells..lifting a switch, the bars open and "they" are released..those 14 kids, now ten years older, aren't remotely human as we'd describe. Hal is ferociously attacked and soon Dwayne, along with his prisoner, investigate for himself what lies within that secret room, and the horrifying discoveries will change the landscape of the sleepy town of Stone Grove forever.Craig Singer's PERKINS 14 ambiguously relates to us why these youths are such ferocious, cannibalistic, practically unstoppable predators. Through some collected recordings in Perkin's hidden room, Dwayne realizes that they were held prisoner, not allowed to talk, barely fed, and injected with drugs(..PCP is one such drug established)..being a pharmacist, Perkins may've even experimented with these kids, pumping their systems with only God know what. The killers resemble the fast-moving zombies of the modern horror era..they move fast, their eyes are albino(..representing the loss of humanity, nothing visible ), clothes tattered, and attack with feverish intensity. Victims who often encounter them have little time to defend themselves and the killers rip them to shreds, devouring their flesh like hungry vultures. The film is depressingly bleak and the story of the family of the Hoppers is quite a somber, tragic one. I feel like the film's strength is the effects on the Hoppers regarding the loss of the son and how happiness has eroded over time due to Dwayne's detachment from his loved ones and life in general. Before the killer youths are unleashed on the town, we see how Dwayne's obsession in finding Kyle has caused a friction between himself and his wife/daughter. Wife Janine(Mihaela Mihut)has been having an affair with a local stud, and daughter Daisy(Shayla Beesley)is enamored with a potential rock star. When circumstances pen the Hoppers inside the town sheriff's department, they will have to put aside their differences, and ban together..but, facing the sheer thought of killing his son in order to save themselves is what drives the central emotional conflict, and Dwayne's plight draws enormous sympathy. It would be incredibly hard for a parent, once he's finally found the long-lost son everyone said was dead, to actually kill him. The hope that he can reach Kyle is what motivates the dread..deep inside we know that Dwayne's outcome will probably not end well, but understand why he makes such decisions. While I don't understand why these kids attack humans with weapons, tearing into their flesh, and yet aren't able to determine any human emotion at all(..or understand that their actions aren't justified), they are a frightening brood..director Singer displays their cruel methods of destruction(..such as the use of a champagne bottle to smash in a face or the off-distance shot of a flashlight bobbing up and down in the dark as we squishing sounds)in devastating ways, while we also witness their nasty eating habits(..one victim's stomach is torn open as they remove his organs and intestines)and determined pursuit for victims(..one female killer youth is so desirable for Janine, locked in a bathroom, her fingernails come apart as she rips up and down the door). The tragic fate of the Hoppers, at the hands of their own Kyle, is particularly chilling because a promise is broken. Most of the attacks are often cleverly disguised by Singer through camera movement, careful editing, and flickering light(..not to mention the darkness of night). Plenty of blood shed, though. The major problem that rather ate at me(..pun intended)was the idea that Perkins planned all of this in advance, his imprisonment would set off the cycle of events that would ensue..it's the "Saw" logic that everything would have to perfectly fall into place for his "revenge" on those who quit looking for their children(..his psychosis derives from the fact that those investigating the slaughter of his parents while he was in the house and could hear the whole thing gave up, just calling this situation a murder-suicide)to be successful, with characters exactly behaving predictably as he planned it in his mind.

More
homerjer
2009/01/12

1) A small-town police force is not prepared for a brain-addled zombie invasion, even if the invasion only consists of 14. Small towns should have the state police and National Guard on speed dial.2) The police station in Stone Cove is amazingly bereft of guns.3) The citizens of Stone Cove don't have a fight-or-flight response. It has been replaced by a "stand and watch while killers approach" response.4) People who wander off to the bathroom in the middle of a crisis situation deserve to die.5) While some actors from the UK can do a very good job of sounding American, Patrick O'Kane (who plays lead character Dwayne Hopper) is not one of them.6) Love may conquer all, but it's a bit much to expect when heavy PCP use is involved.7) The film Perkins 14 is a lot like many of its characters: Good-looking but not very smart. Sadly, even a very good premise can't bear the weight of too much stupidity.

More