Friday, January 20, 2023

Bargain Bin Review: Llamageddon

Here, my friends, is the true joy of bad movies: You don’t know what you’re going to get.

You know what you’re going to get from a blockbuster film: You’ll get an exciting incident to kick things off, the main character blanching at the Call to Action, a montage with a catchy needle-drop, a couple whiz-bang set pieces, and maybe a big-name cameo before the third act twist. I’m not slagging those things, not at all. I just know that’s what I’m getting.

But bargain bin movies? No idea. Sure, sometimes you get the dreariest movie imaginable, but sometimes you get a hidden gem. And sometimes you get a llama that shoots frickin’ laser beams.

 


Directed by Howie Dewin, 2015, 69 minutes, Unrated
“Damn kids and their laser beams!”

 

We open with death metal and some stunningly good animation. On a far-off planet, an army of angry llamas are preparing for universal domination. One llama boards its Intergalactic Trailblazer trailer and flies off through the cosmos, blows up a space station, and then lands on earth… TITLE CARD! We then cut to live action with a live llama meandering around aimlessly. But this llama has CGI red eyes… TITLE CARD! (yes, again).

A farming couple listlessly notice the llama, but shrug it off. Given that Louie the Llama is credited as “Killer Llama,” things don’t end well for the farmers. 

Louie the Llama IS Killer Llama

By the next day, the government has found the Intergalactic Trailblazer trailer and sent some of its Best Men to investigate. And by “Best Men,” I mean we get a shot of a helicopter landing, a guy climbing out, looking around and declaring, “My God… Alright, just, uh, bag ‘em up and get ‘em back to the base” before re-boarding the ‘copter and taking off. I have to believe a solid half of the film’s budget went to that shot.

Fast-forward to the farmers’ family fresh from the funeral. Sister Mel is put off by the whole thing while Brother Floyd – who is either 13, 30 or 30 playing a 13-year-old – is struggling to get his head around the death of his grandparents at the hands of “an escaped zoo animal.”

This is Floyd


Mom informs them that they’ll be staying by themselves that night at the farm because Reasons. Also, Mom is super sassy for someone who suddenly lost her parents. “You know your grandparents – they’ll buy anything that they don’t need.” Mom also calls out Floyd for wetting the bed (?!?) before lecturing them about not throwing a big party. Naturally, Mel immediately throws a party.

Much of the rest of the film takes place at the party, where the partygoers do traditional party things (drink, play beer pong, argue about movies, hook up, etc.) until the llama kills them with its laser vision. Along the way, the filmmakers make some odd choices. Some work (one character has a different shirt in literally every scene, a “space stick” that is clearly a Wiffle Ball bat wrapped in aluminum foil) and some not so much (a random extended slow-motion dance, a twentysomething telling his much older colleague that he’s “getting too old for this shit,” pretty much every sound effect decision). At least Llamageddon doesn’t take itself too seriously.

More than anything, Llamageddon reminds me of a TromaFilm. If you don’t know, Troma is a film company known for making low budget b-movies such as The Toxic Avenger, Class of Nuke ‘Em High and Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead. Llamageddon has the same spirit, and clearly the same budget, but – at the risk of losing my bad movie cred – it also has the same kind of queasy aesthetics: geysers of vomit, extreme close-ups of mouths, that kind of thing.

 The surviving cast, mid-hosing

With that in mind, I’m giving Llamageddon my very first quantified rating. Let’s hope I don’t make a habit of this.

For Troma fans: ***

For everyone else: **

 

 

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