32 reviews
It's been a while since I saw a new found-footage/mockumentary horror flick, so "Gags the clown" was welcome on the screen this evening & I really did enjoy it, however, it's not a very good one.
A pretty fast moving found footage horror comedy (with nearly zero actual comedy) taking course over one night, put together from live news, police cameras, teens and their smartphones, cctv's, a podcast team etc. - I liked this approach, the many cameras, characters, locations really helped with the pacing and visual diversity. So the whole city is either looking for or hiding from Gags the clown. The characters involved are very simple and one-dimensional, with a concerning amount of a-hole roles. As it happens in a lot of horror movies, some characters and their actions don't always make sense. The acting is as good as the script allows. The story is pretty straight forward, trying to build up the climax, the mystery behind the clown, only to reveal what it had revealed already before - it's all a social commentary, a satire on today's media, society and other related things. Not that it's bad, it's just that somewhere "Gags the clown" falls a bit flat, not hitting the nail on the head. The scares and most of the potential for creepiness is abruptly stopped with digital glitches and the gore is weak. There were a few little, cool elements I liked, for example, the balloon shtick (You'll have to watch it if You want to know). Visually, judging by the found-footage genre standarts, it's quite alright, could've been better if the budget allowed more than a "let's cut it with a glitch".
I think "Gags the clown" has a great idea somewhere in it, but is confused within itself. The fast pacing & many faces and locations provide a level of entertainment, and if you like or, even better, are scared of clowns, you might enjoy this. My rating: 5/10.
A pretty fast moving found footage horror comedy (with nearly zero actual comedy) taking course over one night, put together from live news, police cameras, teens and their smartphones, cctv's, a podcast team etc. - I liked this approach, the many cameras, characters, locations really helped with the pacing and visual diversity. So the whole city is either looking for or hiding from Gags the clown. The characters involved are very simple and one-dimensional, with a concerning amount of a-hole roles. As it happens in a lot of horror movies, some characters and their actions don't always make sense. The acting is as good as the script allows. The story is pretty straight forward, trying to build up the climax, the mystery behind the clown, only to reveal what it had revealed already before - it's all a social commentary, a satire on today's media, society and other related things. Not that it's bad, it's just that somewhere "Gags the clown" falls a bit flat, not hitting the nail on the head. The scares and most of the potential for creepiness is abruptly stopped with digital glitches and the gore is weak. There were a few little, cool elements I liked, for example, the balloon shtick (You'll have to watch it if You want to know). Visually, judging by the found-footage genre standarts, it's quite alright, could've been better if the budget allowed more than a "let's cut it with a glitch".
I think "Gags the clown" has a great idea somewhere in it, but is confused within itself. The fast pacing & many faces and locations provide a level of entertainment, and if you like or, even better, are scared of clowns, you might enjoy this. My rating: 5/10.
- TwistedContent
- Sep 11, 2019
- Permalink
Gags the Clown (2018) is currently available for free on Amazon Prime, and it's a decent addition to the clown horror genre. The story follows a mysterious clown, Gags, who appears throughout a city leaving behind strange balloons. When these balloons pop, they release a white powder that, if inhaled, causes people to go insane and start killing. The local media and a determined blogger set out to track Gags down, as the police struggle to capture the elusive clown.
Directed by Adam Krause in his first major motion picture, Gags the Clown delivers some solid kill scenes and an entertaining storyline. The dynamic between the blogger and the competing news crews was well-executed, and the final funhouse sequence was a standout moment. The acting by Tracy Perez (The Strain), Lauren Ashley Carter (Pod, Jug Face), and Aaron Christensen (Dead Weight, Gray Matter) was above average and believable, helping to elevate the film.
Overall, this is an entertaining film that's worth a watch, especially for fans of the genre. I'd rate it 5.5/10.
Directed by Adam Krause in his first major motion picture, Gags the Clown delivers some solid kill scenes and an entertaining storyline. The dynamic between the blogger and the competing news crews was well-executed, and the final funhouse sequence was a standout moment. The acting by Tracy Perez (The Strain), Lauren Ashley Carter (Pod, Jug Face), and Aaron Christensen (Dead Weight, Gray Matter) was above average and believable, helping to elevate the film.
Overall, this is an entertaining film that's worth a watch, especially for fans of the genre. I'd rate it 5.5/10.
- kevin_robbins
- May 15, 2021
- Permalink
I have never wrote a review for a movie before, but I fell like I should for this movie. This is not a typical killer dressed as a clown movie, it has something to creep everyone out. While some of the acting was a little over the top, the plot made up for it. The visual effects were also pretty good for a smaller budget film. Overall it's a very decent movie that I thoroughly enjoyed.
I was really looking forward to watch this movie. Clown sightings always intrigued me and I was really hopping this movie could make me feel uneasy and creeped out.
Unfortunately it fails miserably in everything a scary movie should acomplish. I had the impression that the movie was 2h30 long since I was really bored. No creepy scenes, no eerie atmosphere, no nothing. Even the parts that were supposed to be scary are so lame.
And what the hell was that ending?? If you're looking for answers about the clown identity or why does he just stands there watching people... well, prepare yourself to a "no answers" ending. Seems like they created the story, but as they could not explain it themselves, they just made that uninspired ending.
I really think hard before doing a bad review because even if the movie is bad, it has some amount of effort by the crew and actors. But then again... I didn't feel that they even bothered to write a plot that makes sense. Sorry, but I cannot recommend this movie to anyone, unless I want that person to be bored for 1h30m...
And what the hell was that ending?? If you're looking for answers about the clown identity or why does he just stands there watching people... well, prepare yourself to a "no answers" ending. Seems like they created the story, but as they could not explain it themselves, they just made that uninspired ending.
I really think hard before doing a bad review because even if the movie is bad, it has some amount of effort by the crew and actors. But then again... I didn't feel that they even bothered to write a plot that makes sense. Sorry, but I cannot recommend this movie to anyone, unless I want that person to be bored for 1h30m...
- Carlos_1984
- Sep 13, 2019
- Permalink
How do you screw up a found footage film about a creepy clown? Well, you need bad actors to say poorly written lines of dialogue, meaningless subplots, a confused tone, and some ideological crap that is meant to insult people who happen to own guns. In this film, they are raving lunatics who carry guns secretly hoping to kill someone and praying that a situation occurs where they can legally shoot someone dead. Complete rubbish. Half way into the film I almost forgot it was about a clown, it was that confusing.
This movie is not a 7/10 it's a cheap trash cash grab. Horrible acting, horrible writing, executated horribly. Just wait for Wrinkles The Clown.
- lewisburrows-67408
- Sep 11, 2019
- Permalink
Gags was surprising entertaining and refreshing way of merging clown phobias and the idea of fake news. Its production values looks good and good acting. Apparently the director, Adam Krause and screenwriter, John Pata was inspired by real accounts of a person in California and another person in England who dressed as a clown walking at night, baiting for people take pics of them.
For this film, director Krause took that idea turned it into an interesting fun movie with jump scares and a bit of humor. Some of its cast create memorable characters like the ultra right/social media figure, Charles Wright (played by Aaron Christensen) who goes on a live social media event chase-hunt for Gags. It makes for its funny dialogue!
Recommended it for a fun time and of course clowns are usually creepy, Gags succeeded at being such an enigma. Other characters such as Heater Duprey (played by Lauren Ashley Carter) represent the local public media reportage and channel stations trying to get the latest news of Gaga sightings before the social media coverage does.
For this film, director Krause took that idea turned it into an interesting fun movie with jump scares and a bit of humor. Some of its cast create memorable characters like the ultra right/social media figure, Charles Wright (played by Aaron Christensen) who goes on a live social media event chase-hunt for Gags. It makes for its funny dialogue!
Recommended it for a fun time and of course clowns are usually creepy, Gags succeeded at being such an enigma. Other characters such as Heater Duprey (played by Lauren Ashley Carter) represent the local public media reportage and channel stations trying to get the latest news of Gaga sightings before the social media coverage does.
- babyjaguar
- Jun 26, 2018
- Permalink
- gwnightscream
- Feb 19, 2020
- Permalink
I enjoyd this movie far more than i expected to. the acting was pretty good all around and the clown was creepy af. and I apperciate it not having the usual cliches nor the phony hollywood ending. it gets a pretty loud horray from me.
- katastrofkatt
- Sep 16, 2019
- Permalink
We need so called writers to stop putting in their political beliefs . The slop that was put together to make this had a character that was supposed to be a conservative , this character was made to look like conservatives we're worse than the main killer of the movie ( if you can call it a movie ). Stay away from this movie you will have more of a experience watching paint dry.
Just got back home from its premier. Not going to lie I went to it with little hopes it would be any good. Well they proved me wrong, it was good. Normally I am not a fan of the way they did there camera views "not sure what it's called" but it was put together really well and was different in a good way. Way funnier than I thought a horror film could be as well. So for my score it's going to be a bit higher just because I am from Green Bay and want to see these guys do well! It's a solid 6.5 though!
A few laughs combined with an interesting plot. Certainly no award winner but better than you might expect.
- pachanga-13349
- Jun 27, 2020
- Permalink
Its definitely not the worst found footage out there but... Clowns? Really? I don't think this topic works anymore on anybody.
I can see that decent amount of work went in to making this movie, it has its short moments but the main topic makes it just not very enjoyable but really really meh and boring.
- jessicartim
- Mar 17, 2020
- Permalink
Of course I opted to sit down and watch this 2018 horror comedy titled "Gags The Clown", as I happened to stumble upon it by random luck here in 2024. Sure, I had never heard about the movie, and thus didn't know what I was in for. And in turn, I had zero expectations to the movie, aside from it being a horror comedy. So writers Adam Krause (whom also directed the movie) and John Pata had every opportunity to entertain me.
And they failed miserably. I managed to suffer through 42 minutes of the 89 minute runtime. Then I just couldn't take anymore of the boredom. The storyline and script in "Gags The Clown", from Adam Krause and John Pata, was anything but entertaining. There was nothing funny in the storyline, nor were there anything scary. So as for "Gags The Clown" being a horror comedy, not so much. This was more like a 'someone had an idea while drunk and opted to bring it to the screen with their home video camera' type of movie.
Needless to say that I wasn't familiar with the cast ensemble in the movie. However, I will say that some of the performances were actually fair enough, despite the fact that they had next to nothing to work with in terms of a proper script, storyline or character gallery.
There was nothing interesting to be seen on the screen, and even less so in terms of special effects.
If you enjoy horror comedies, like I do, then just skip on "Gags The Clown", because it simply isn't worth the time, money or effort. Some of us suffered through this ordeal, in lesser or greater extend, so you don't have to.
My rating of director Adam Krause's 2018 movie "Gags The Clown" lands on a very generous two out of ten stars.
And they failed miserably. I managed to suffer through 42 minutes of the 89 minute runtime. Then I just couldn't take anymore of the boredom. The storyline and script in "Gags The Clown", from Adam Krause and John Pata, was anything but entertaining. There was nothing funny in the storyline, nor were there anything scary. So as for "Gags The Clown" being a horror comedy, not so much. This was more like a 'someone had an idea while drunk and opted to bring it to the screen with their home video camera' type of movie.
Needless to say that I wasn't familiar with the cast ensemble in the movie. However, I will say that some of the performances were actually fair enough, despite the fact that they had next to nothing to work with in terms of a proper script, storyline or character gallery.
There was nothing interesting to be seen on the screen, and even less so in terms of special effects.
If you enjoy horror comedies, like I do, then just skip on "Gags The Clown", because it simply isn't worth the time, money or effort. Some of us suffered through this ordeal, in lesser or greater extend, so you don't have to.
My rating of director Adam Krause's 2018 movie "Gags The Clown" lands on a very generous two out of ten stars.
- paul_haakonsen
- Jan 4, 2024
- Permalink
What stinks is that i am a huge found footage fan and i own literally every found footage movie on DVD including rarities like "Long Pigs" and "June 9" and I must say that "Gags the Clown" is definitely one of the worst I've seen in the genre. Gags is so far from being scary its almost funny. I was expecting to love this movie and I am extremely generous when judging films especially indie low budgeters, however, this movie had ZERO redeeming qualities. I can't believe the green horn director from Green Bay actually used such a well known indie actor like Lauren Ashley Carter in his found footage film... What makes found footage scary is when it feels like it could really happen or when it tricks us for those few minutes of the film where we forget it's fake due to the creep factor and the surrealism....buuuuut "Gags" offers none of this. Watching this Movie made me think of another found footage film i have on blu ray called "388 Arletta Ave".. They are both SO bad and both have absolutely no atmosphere... "Gags" is clearly directed by a dumb founded director and as much as i LOVE and support the industry.., it eerks me when i see trash "horror" like this coming from douchy dudes wearing a doucey smile...a BIG no and an honest review.
- TuesdayThe17th
- Jan 7, 2020
- Permalink
I want to start with some praise for gags. For what seems like a no budget horror passion project/corman esq market share grab, probably shot and assembled rather hastily, this film has some truly shining moments of inventiveness that give some really great creepy imagery (particularly an amazing shot involving a cloud of talc and a man standing like carpenters shape overwhelming the frame with mennace). Had this script had a few more eyes to help streamline and focus the narrative and iron out the kinks in the dialogue (puke and rally?...dude its "boot and rally" unless they are supposed to be fully Canadians and not Americans....) that throw otherwise good scenes a challenge for the performers to try to push through. Honestly its a fun watch if you like schlocky horror but it has moments of potential greatness and i imagine this director and his team have some really awesome pictures in them!
After watching Gags I thought "meh." Its underdeveloped, not really gory, mostly creepy, the characters have no depth, and there's not a lot going on. But given a moment to think about, the actors were entertaining, the story moved along, and it was legitimately freaky. Given it looks like it was made on $50 and a bottle of ketchup, I'd have to say I thought Gags the Clown is a fairly done B-movie.
- hubbard-51836
- Jul 28, 2020
- Permalink
Gags The Clown 2018. Supposed to be suspense... you know...what you don't see.... scares you (imagination), but ya need extremely good acting for that to work, though if they had more smog slash fog and some creepy back-ground music to distract the viewer then maybe more convincing... lol... however cinematography was good... and clown-suits were good...
- The-caped-gremlin-hobbies
- Jul 4, 2020
- Permalink
- morrison-dylan-fan
- Nov 6, 2020
- Permalink
Neither people nor horror films need to be dressed in any particular way to be creepy and elicit particular reactions, but it doesn't hurt. There have been no shortage of movies made about evil clowns, or movies capitalizing on the trend in the past several years of people in clown suits deliberately provoking with bizarre performance art, and the fear of clowns is a very common one. It's fair to ask if titles jumping on the coulrophobia bandwagon aren't taking a cheap and easy road to making a buck or two, but by the same token, none of this means that a title can't be deserving of its own merits. I like the approach that director Adam Krause and co-writer John Pata adopted for 'Gags the Clown': instead of one discrete narrative, the picture presents a scattered portraiture of people around Green Bay stumbling into the titular figure, investigating them, trying to live their lives despite them, or reacting to the phenomenon. A few consistent and slowly converging threads give loose structure to the proceedings, while apparent attacks dot the length throughout. This perhaps isn't the most groundbreaking or essential flick in the world, but it's duly entertaining, and I'd say better than I'd have assumed sights unseen.
While the production values are frankly bare-faced, glaring almost to the point of hurting one's eyes, I appreciate Krause's direction, and Pata's editing, as the picture bounces back and forth between concurrent scenes and various camera perspectives. With these aspects in mind, any variety of visual or special effects employed at one time or another all look great in helping to build the tableau. Specific scenes, moments, and inclusions are decidedly unsettling as the loose story shows there's more to the clownishness than first meets the eye - though the feature as a whole struggles to build any atmosphere as it swings between eerie goings-on and weak attempts at humor, to say nothing of swinging back and forth between disparate threads. For that matter, many characters are plainly unlikable such that we start cheering for Gags at least in part. The cast all perform admirably with the material they're given, though no one especially stands out except perhaps Lauren Ashley Carter; having loved her in anything I've seen her in, I admit it's possible I'm just predisposed to favor her anyway.
The uneven tone and naked production values are somewhat wearing on one's patience, but at large this is pretty well made. There are still other flaws to note, however, and the one that sticks out most to me is that characters as they present are seemingly written with intelligence that comes and goes. This is to say, for example, that even though Gags maintains the same appearance at all times, some characters emphatically seeking or worried about them loses their composure whenever anyone at all wearing a clown suit appears - even when it's an obviously different one. And while the various elements of the climax are done well, there's so much going on at once (including story ideas that are introduced for the first time) that, at what should or perhaps needs to be the film's strongest point, it instead comes across as unfocused. As if to accentuate the point: when the end credits start rolling, following the violence of the climax, and we're treated to a tongue-in-cheek theme song that is the first unequivocal effort to provide comedy just for the fact of the contrast, the sudden leap is aggravating instead of fun.
I think there are good ideas here, but there are also undeniable flaws and shortcomings that act as proportionate counterweight. I don't think 'Gags the Clown' is altogether bad - I did enjoy myself while watching, at least to some extent - but by no means is it anything special, either. The result is a feature that has its ups and downs and ultimately just kind of languishes in the unremarkable middle. It's satisfactorily enjoyable if you come across it, but unless you're a major fan of someone involved or, why not, movies about clowns, then nor is there any one reason to go out of your way for it. It's alright; would that the writing were just tightened a bit more to keep the picture centered.
While the production values are frankly bare-faced, glaring almost to the point of hurting one's eyes, I appreciate Krause's direction, and Pata's editing, as the picture bounces back and forth between concurrent scenes and various camera perspectives. With these aspects in mind, any variety of visual or special effects employed at one time or another all look great in helping to build the tableau. Specific scenes, moments, and inclusions are decidedly unsettling as the loose story shows there's more to the clownishness than first meets the eye - though the feature as a whole struggles to build any atmosphere as it swings between eerie goings-on and weak attempts at humor, to say nothing of swinging back and forth between disparate threads. For that matter, many characters are plainly unlikable such that we start cheering for Gags at least in part. The cast all perform admirably with the material they're given, though no one especially stands out except perhaps Lauren Ashley Carter; having loved her in anything I've seen her in, I admit it's possible I'm just predisposed to favor her anyway.
The uneven tone and naked production values are somewhat wearing on one's patience, but at large this is pretty well made. There are still other flaws to note, however, and the one that sticks out most to me is that characters as they present are seemingly written with intelligence that comes and goes. This is to say, for example, that even though Gags maintains the same appearance at all times, some characters emphatically seeking or worried about them loses their composure whenever anyone at all wearing a clown suit appears - even when it's an obviously different one. And while the various elements of the climax are done well, there's so much going on at once (including story ideas that are introduced for the first time) that, at what should or perhaps needs to be the film's strongest point, it instead comes across as unfocused. As if to accentuate the point: when the end credits start rolling, following the violence of the climax, and we're treated to a tongue-in-cheek theme song that is the first unequivocal effort to provide comedy just for the fact of the contrast, the sudden leap is aggravating instead of fun.
I think there are good ideas here, but there are also undeniable flaws and shortcomings that act as proportionate counterweight. I don't think 'Gags the Clown' is altogether bad - I did enjoy myself while watching, at least to some extent - but by no means is it anything special, either. The result is a feature that has its ups and downs and ultimately just kind of languishes in the unremarkable middle. It's satisfactorily enjoyable if you come across it, but unless you're a major fan of someone involved or, why not, movies about clowns, then nor is there any one reason to go out of your way for it. It's alright; would that the writing were just tightened a bit more to keep the picture centered.
- I_Ailurophile
- Oct 20, 2022
- Permalink
I would have skipped this. 4.6/10? I get that found footage horror movies will always be given lower scores by people who aren't huge horror fans..but this is just weird. I'm not rating this vs. The Godfather or The Shawshank Redemption. I'm rating this in comparison to modern horror films. This is well above average on every level..and I'm someone who thinks clown horror movies are dumb and it was awful. Maybe it's my love for found footage horror, but this movie was sick.
- brandonsmuxx
- Sep 1, 2020
- Permalink
I didn't really have high hopes for this one, as the reviews were pretty hit and miss. The premise is decent and the material was all there for a truly scary FF film but in the end it just didn't work. I get that clowns are supposed to be funny to some and scary to others but in this film the clown was just a slightly creepy character. They could have made a great film touching on the character of Gags and the surrounding copycats trying to benefit off of him but it just ended up ham-fisted. If they had not decided to put in some "dark humor" it could have worked. I'm not exactly sure if they intended to make part of it funny but that's the way it comes across. They should have ditched the cheesiness and tried to make a serious film. I fell like that would have had a much better chance at succeeding. Overall it was below average.
- ksgillihan
- Dec 11, 2022
- Permalink
- tchitouniaram
- Sep 16, 2019
- Permalink