12 reviews
Gathering the will to finally start, a psychotic chef embarks on a cruel spree abducting whatever foreigner he can find off the streets of Los Angeles and turning them into the latest meals in his restaurant before he succumbs to a debilitating disease he caught from the meat he's served.
For the most part, this one was a pretty solid indie effort. One of its strongest elements is the rather dark and grim stylistic choice towards the more exploitative elements. The opening abduction of the French couple and the way they're toyed with and butchered gives the film a solid start with the brutality he dishes out. The scenes of him stalking the various tourists, from the guy in the hotel room to the other victim in the subway which all revolve around the chef and his assistant tormenting and playing around with their bodies before killing them. As all of this is clearly spelled out by the backstory at play that showed how he attacked and killed his family before eating them as a kid that spells out his backstory of mental imbalance, it makes for a pretty chilling setup at work. That adds a dark tone to the second half with a more detailed look at what's going on. The series of revelations that are made here about the characters' debilitating battle with Mad Cow Disease and how he's going around spreading that in the food he serves injecting his tainted blood into the prepared meals add a disgusting touch to the film. Since this is tied into his preferential treatment towards tourists who he's targeting to kill, the psychological insight into him this gives is quite striking that gets played out in grand detail with the xenophobic undertones at play within their torture methods. This ends up making for a strong, at times graphic and gory psychologically impressive effort with a menacing, imposing villain which is enough to really hold this one up. While this one does have a lot to like, there are a few minor flaws. Despite its best intentions, there's little it can do to ignore its low-budget trappings, plagued with horrible sound design that renders a lot of the dialog to be incomprehensible due to the on-location recordings. It's usually drowned out by the local elements at play in the scene or the echoey nature of the scene renders it virtually impossible to make out clearly, relying on the context of the scene to fill in the missing pieces. As well, the film's tendency to play as a straightforward ripoff of one of the biggest and most well-revered genre efforts ever due to replaying sequences exactly the same way and the same manner for several prominent scenes tips its hand rather easily about its influences and intentions. It's not too detrimental but does stand out somewhat in the film.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
For the most part, this one was a pretty solid indie effort. One of its strongest elements is the rather dark and grim stylistic choice towards the more exploitative elements. The opening abduction of the French couple and the way they're toyed with and butchered gives the film a solid start with the brutality he dishes out. The scenes of him stalking the various tourists, from the guy in the hotel room to the other victim in the subway which all revolve around the chef and his assistant tormenting and playing around with their bodies before killing them. As all of this is clearly spelled out by the backstory at play that showed how he attacked and killed his family before eating them as a kid that spells out his backstory of mental imbalance, it makes for a pretty chilling setup at work. That adds a dark tone to the second half with a more detailed look at what's going on. The series of revelations that are made here about the characters' debilitating battle with Mad Cow Disease and how he's going around spreading that in the food he serves injecting his tainted blood into the prepared meals add a disgusting touch to the film. Since this is tied into his preferential treatment towards tourists who he's targeting to kill, the psychological insight into him this gives is quite striking that gets played out in grand detail with the xenophobic undertones at play within their torture methods. This ends up making for a strong, at times graphic and gory psychologically impressive effort with a menacing, imposing villain which is enough to really hold this one up. While this one does have a lot to like, there are a few minor flaws. Despite its best intentions, there's little it can do to ignore its low-budget trappings, plagued with horrible sound design that renders a lot of the dialog to be incomprehensible due to the on-location recordings. It's usually drowned out by the local elements at play in the scene or the echoey nature of the scene renders it virtually impossible to make out clearly, relying on the context of the scene to fill in the missing pieces. As well, the film's tendency to play as a straightforward ripoff of one of the biggest and most well-revered genre efforts ever due to replaying sequences exactly the same way and the same manner for several prominent scenes tips its hand rather easily about its influences and intentions. It's not too detrimental but does stand out somewhat in the film.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.
- kannibalcorpsegrinder
- Dec 27, 2019
- Permalink
I like the concept of the film. I enjoyed much of the acting. I especially enjoyed Maria Olsen. The cinematography was good for a low budget film, but lacked variety. The basic plot was interesting, but didnt failed to fully develop. The writing is what destroyed this film. The plot, story and characters were all underdeveloped. My advice, get a new writer.
- goldenageoffilm
- Dec 27, 2019
- Permalink
The practical effects are bloody and perfect.
The story is unique, and original.
The maniac is demented and truly terrifying.
This is a shining star in the field of indies.
- canisanubis
- Feb 26, 2020
- Permalink
- BandSAboutMovies
- Feb 15, 2020
- Permalink
I love the gritty and brutal aspect of the movie! you can really tell that michael moutsatsos is very creative and passionate about his film work and i hope that Michael makes a second film with the butcher! that would be siccck!
- gamerbullys
- Jan 11, 2020
- Permalink
Give this film a watch. Whether you like gore or are in the mood for scares, The Butcher will satisfy your craving in every way. Definitely a true classic in the making.
- kingcobra49036
- Jan 11, 2020
- Permalink
From start to finish this is clearly a love letter to such films as Texas Chainsaw Massacre and the lead Michael Moutsatsos reminds us of Joe Spinell (Maniac) clearly Michael Moutsatsos is on to something. The cast Maria Olsen shines as his mother. Can't wait to see The Butcher 2
- whollywoodmoose
- Jan 9, 2020
- Permalink
A good ole fashion horror movie. Great actors deliver a well written bloody story. The makers of this slasher flick deliver the goods. When you rent or buy a movie called The Butcher you want blood.
Well you get buckets of blood. I heard there is goin to be a sequel. I for one didn't want to see this end. I got my wish now a sequel is in the works.
A must see!!!!
- shagee7977
- Jan 10, 2020
- Permalink
Very good movie great plot and awesome cast and the film is done by an awesome director who works so hard to bring a really awesome film.
This 21st century Halloween-style slasher might be chilling, gross, or blood-curlding for some, but heart-warming for those who are familiar with the incredible number of classic horror films referenced and nodded to in this production.
Each dialogue scene tells us more about who our killer is, what his motivations are, and how he's decided to commit the next murder, but the easter eggs in the background, lines, props, and framing make this a joy for horror connoisseurs to rewatch over and over. Many won't get to enjoy the moments that will make film buffs laugh or gasp in surprise, but this film is multi-faceted so it can be enjoyed as a simple slasher even if you don't get all the references.
The murders are unique compared to a lot of stereotypical slashers, the sfx is all practical with no CGi, really giving it that classic horror feel, and we never feel like a killing is recycled within the film.
As the movie winds to a close the goosebumps start to appear as we realize the scope of the terror our Butcher has caused, and reflect on the lunacy of his disease mixed with the class of his character.
Each dialogue scene tells us more about who our killer is, what his motivations are, and how he's decided to commit the next murder, but the easter eggs in the background, lines, props, and framing make this a joy for horror connoisseurs to rewatch over and over. Many won't get to enjoy the moments that will make film buffs laugh or gasp in surprise, but this film is multi-faceted so it can be enjoyed as a simple slasher even if you don't get all the references.
The murders are unique compared to a lot of stereotypical slashers, the sfx is all practical with no CGi, really giving it that classic horror feel, and we never feel like a killing is recycled within the film.
As the movie winds to a close the goosebumps start to appear as we realize the scope of the terror our Butcher has caused, and reflect on the lunacy of his disease mixed with the class of his character.
- filmmakerfilmlover
- Jan 11, 2020
- Permalink
- thelifeboxmediaChannel
- Jan 24, 2020
- Permalink