Angry Asian Murder Hornets (2020) by Dustin Ferguson


Director: Dustin Ferguson
Year: 2020
Country: USA
Alternate Titles: N/A
Genre: Creature Feature

Plot:
Living in various parts of the world, a disparate group of people in the community find themselves under attack by a mutated strand of murder hornets killing off anything they come into contact with and must collectively find a way of stopping the deadly creatures.

Review:

This was a thrilling and fun throwback monster movie. That this opens up with a fantastically cheesy prologue about the creatures and their existence, giving full details to their anatomy, predatory qualifications and a reason as to why they’re about to go on a murderous rampage, sets the stage perfectly. Detailing how they’re great killing machines and what could potentially occur when they come into contact with people is a fine and appropriate setup to this type of film, especially with the series of topical ties given in the setup involving how the creatures turn around to start attacking people.

Those scenes featuring the creatures coming into contact and killing victims are cheesy good fun as well. Since they tend to appear as a massive warm suddenly while attacking, the ambush-like attacks on the movie collector, the swarming of the fleeing citizens in the park or the attack on the live-streaming social media guru come off incredibly fun as the creatures swoop in and attack. Given the nature of its background and history, these are evocative of those old-school series by offering the creatures attacking and overwhelming victims which is always a delight to watch. Featuring some cheesy gore and kills in these scenes, there are some entertaining elements present.

While there isn’t much, the film does have a couple of minor problems. Its biggest issue is the obvious tricks done to pad out the running time, which tends to feature any of the scenes where a character walks somewhere. It feels like the entire trek there is shown where everything is captured of the individual walking around while suspenseful music plays even though nothing happens. It occurs several times and is quite obvious of the tactic. The other issue present here is the obvious and laughable CGI present on the creatures which fall into every predictable and commonly utilized flaw out there. These are what hold it back although they’re not that detrimental.


Overview: ***.5/5
Despite some obvious limitations present that shouldn't matter due to its production history and terms of conception, this one manages enough to like that come about due to the other positives featured. Give this a look if you're a fan of cheesy creature features, the creative crew or intrigued by the premise while those turned off by the style or subject matter should heed caution.

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