Actors: Robert Englund, Yancy Butler, Nigel Barber
Director: A.B. Stone
Format: Multiple Formats, AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: English
Subtitles: English
Region: Region 1
Number of discs: 1
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Release Date: August 4, 2015
Run Time: 92 minutes
When there have already been far too
many sequels in a franchise, the next logical step is to combine it with
another overdone film series. Even in larger budget films, this has been
attempted over enough time, which is how we ended up with Alien vs. Predator and Freddy
vs. Jason. But despite Robert Englund in a supporting role, the Syfy
Channel original film, Lake Placid vs. Anaconda,
comes nowhere close to the quality of these theatrical releases. Instead, this
just looks like every other TV movie from this station, cheaply made in another
country for the lowest possible budget.
Everybody should know what they are
getting from the Syfy Channel by now, especially those who have followed the
adoption of both these creature feature franchises. It is the fifth film in
both the Anaconda and Lake Placid franchises,
though many of the sequels were also cheaply made TV movies with CGI graphics
just as predictably atrocious as they are here. Forget what you may have liked
from the original films, because neither retains even a fraction of the same
quality. Instead we are given the frozen TV dinner version of the same thing,
tasting of sad desperation and laziness.
The plot is nearly insignificant to
the experience, but the reason for each of these creatures being brought
together has something to do with genetic modification. It doesn’t really
matter beyond the excuse to have bikini-clad sorority girls running for their
lives between scenes of senseless undressing and CGI carnage. Apparently Black Lake
(the actual name of the lake from the Lake Placid franchise) is only six miles
away from Clear Lake , which is somehow where the
anaconda snakes ended up after the initial Amazon setting of the theatrical
films. All that really matters is that there are a series of sudden crocodile
attacks against a group of sorority sisters in various states of undress, and
then the snakes appear in the final scenes for a showdown that actually saves
many of the victims.
Shot in Bulgaria , the film is stacked with
European actors doing their best to hide accents as they expose body parts.
Robert Englund makes a brief appearance, though he is clearly here for namesake
more than performance. The entire endeavor feels forced and rushed, which is
never more apparent than in the atrociously bad computer generated effects that
the Syfy Channel has become known for. Not only were no real animals used, it
is impossible to believe the actors had interaction with anything on set. What
I wouldn’t give to go back to days of cheap rubber snakes of practical effects.
The DVD has no special features,
rightly so. Nothing here deserves further examination, unless you are a teenage
boy desperate to see the breasts of bad actresses bared.
Entertainment Value:
2.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 1/10
Historical
Significance: 0/10
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