May 13,2014
A group of college kids get together for a weekend of booze and war games at an abandoned hospital. The hospital has become the haven for a PTSD stricken war vet coping and acting upon his delusions. Who will survive the game?
nudity | A female torture victim is briefly seen topless. In one scene 3 women (Barbie, Muffy, Lana) take their tops off and their breasts are clearly visible. There are a few kissing scenes throughout the movie. --- A couple (Muffy and Randall) are briefly seen having sex on a mattress, her breasts are visible. A woman (Barbie) gives a man (Kyle) a lap dance with some elements of S&M (whipping him with her bra etc), her breasts are visible. A woman (Lana) dances for a man (La Danian) and gives him a blowjob, her breasts are visible in the scene. (The above 3 scenes are all happening at the same time) --- |
violence | The violence in the movie, while strong and bloody, occurs mostly off-screen with only the aftermath being seen and/or blood splatter. The strongest of this includes a man being nailed to a wall with a nail gun in a crucifix position, by his hands and head, a man being drilled through with a large drill bit, and a woman's legs being obliterated with Hazard Jack's hammer. A bloody, dead body is seen. Hazard Jack is seen carrying two severed heads down a dark hallway. A severed handed is seen on the ground. Hazard Jack sets a man on fire, he is briefly seen burning. A group of severed heads with bloody body matter underneath them are seen on tables. Hazard Jack batters multiple people with his hammer. |
profanity | Infrequent strong language. |
alcohol | A group of people are seen drinking beer. A woman smokes a joint. |
frightening | At the start of the movie, Hazard Jack has a woman tied to a chair before he drags her away. Hazard Jack is a very ominous, menacing character who constantly growls and grunts, and the scenes in which he chases the other characters or is attacking them can be quite intense. --- Compared to other slasher films, Hazard Jack is quite tame because of the lack of on-screen violence. |