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RED,
WHITE & BLUE
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Nate is of course the animal in his cage waiting to be unleashed as he reveals details about her that is most unsettling. Erica nonetheless seeks his companionship, and the two form an unlikely bond that finally breaks her spirit and prompts a confession. Franki is an optimistic young rock and roller who just got a record deal and discovered his ailing mother is now in remission from Cancer. The problem is he's just learned he has HIV, and his one night escapade has come back to bite him and the only solution he can think of is to find the source of his disease and make her pay. What begins as a mere act of passion and anger, slowly progresses in to carnage and all out blood shed as Erica is faced with her misdeeds, Franki has to come to grips with his own crime of passion that he and his band mates have gone in on, and Nate is surely looking to help Erica out when the shit hits the fan. Rumley's film takes a very long time to develop, offering a snail's pace, and dramatic first half that will leave many audiences wondering when we'll start seeing some scares or bloodshed, but Rumley transforms his film about connections through blood and unfortunate victims in to a stalk and slash narrative piece by piece offering up the caged animal to take part in his own acts of reparations, and Franki's own dealings with his acts of anguish and confrontation with karma that seeps in to his life inch by inch. In spite of Rumley's preference to keep "Red, White & Blue" something of a dramatic piece first, his film is no doubt a horror film to the core reliant on the classic devices of fate, karma, revenge, and blood shed, all set to the tone of coincidence, tragedy, and destiny. Once Nate is out on the prowl, no one will be spared, and Rumley provides some truly grotesque and uneasy forms of punishment while also putting in display excellent performances by the entire cast, specifically Noah Taylor whose own sense of moral justice and insanity will keep viewers squirming in their seats and riveted all the way through. Rumley's horror revenge film is a masterpiece, and one that will be most appealing to the high brow horror fans.
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