There’s a decent idea for
an exploitation flick buried in here, because the premise is that hillbillies
who have lived illegally in the wilderness for an extended period of time fight
back once government developers try to clear the land for creation of a park.
Alas, the filmmakers avoid the obvious path of making the hillbillies
sympathetic, instead portraying them as dimwitted maniacs. Worse, the
filmmakers provide the hillbillies with a steady supply of victims by
contriving subplots about folks wandering into the woods during the killing
spree. To a one, the characters in God’s
Bloody Acre are stereotypical and underdeveloped, so it’s impossible to
care what happens to anyone onscreen, though of course basic human empathy
kicks in once the final survivors of the ordeal seem close to becoming victims.
In any event, God’s Bloody Acre
represents many of the worst tropes in horror cinema, reveling in violence
against women (there’s an endless scene of a young lady getting her throat cut)
while reinforcing demeaning clichés about rural populations. Oh, and just for
good measure, the picture throws in a little racism, because, naturally, the
three black guys driving a Rolls-Royce are violent thieves who rob every white
person they encounter. In the spirit of trying to say something kind, director
Harry Kerwin manages a few clever scene transitions, and the vignette of a
fellow getting chopped in two by a bulldozer blade is nasty. But in all the
usual ways for this sort of junk, God’s
Bloody Acre is boring, cheap, dumb, and unsavory.
God’s Bloody Acre: LAME
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