Indie Watch
Cheap Thrills
By Dan Krovich
April 17, 2014
BoxOfficeProphets.com

She has just googled the name of the movie and is now understandably concerned.

VOD Pick of the Week

Cheap Thrills
Craig (Pat Healy) is down on his luck. He apparently at one point at least sniffed some minor success as a writer, but that did not pan out. Now he is a new father behind on his rent and working a low paying job. Things get even worse when he even loses that job and he finds himself in a bar trying to gather himself before having to go home to his wife with more disappointing news of failure. At the bar he runs into Vince (Ethan Embry) an acquaintance he hasn’t seen in over five years.

It’s no surprise that Craig and Vince have drifted apart. In fact, it’s more of a surprise that they were ever friends at all. Craig is a mild mannered straight arrow, while Vince is outspoken and makes his money collecting debts for unsavory characters. The evening takes a turn when they run into Colin (David Koechner) and Violet (Sara Paxton), a married couple who are out for an evening for Violet’s birthday. They begin with a couple harmless bar bets (like who can down a shot of tequila first) where Colin pays the winner cash. The contests escalate until after an encounter with a strip club bouncer they wind up at Colin and Violet’s house.

There the game ramps up as the contests have higher and higher stakes and bigger and bigger cash rewards. Vince with his background adapts quickly to the game, but once his desperation to provide for his family kicks in, Craig becomes a formidable competitor.

Cheap Thrills, at least to an extent, can be seen as a response to the recent economic climate. With many having to face financial hardships, they have probably had to do things they never thought they would have to consider just to get by. Certainly not things as drastic as depicted in the film, but people certainly have had to get creative. There is also an element of the Occupy protests against the “one percent.” Colin and Violet have more money than they know what to do with, and there is no indication that they had to do much of anything to earn it, while Craig and Vince have to degrade themselves at their expense just to get the crumbs they need to live.

David Koechner may very well be a very nice man in real life but he certainly has mastered playing the role of the slimy creep. His Colin isn’t so much evil as amoral. He’s just a bored man looking for entertainment and to give his attractive wife what she wants. Pat Healy also does a good job at conveying something simmering under Craig’s doormat personality that becomes ruthlessness that is brought out by desperation.

Cheap Thrills has won multiple awards at film festivals, usually at genre festivals or in the “midnight” section. It is classified as a comedy-thriller, but whether it is more comedy or more thriller is likely going to hinge on how dark you like your comedy. It is certainly an auspicious debut for director E. L. Katz who is certain to be tapped for mainstream projects with a bit of an edge.
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New releases for April 18th

13 Sins: With a very similar premise, perhaps 13 Sins could work as a double feature with the VOD Pick of the Week, Cheap Thrills. Elliot is a salesman drowning in debt when he receives a phone call telling him that he is on a hidden camera game show and if he executes 13 tasks he will win millions of dollars. The first task is simple enough: to swat the fly that is buzzing around him and when money automatically appears in his bank account he feels he may have the answer to his problems. Of course, the tasks grow more and more sinister as Elliot must continuously decide what lines he is willing to cross.
Available at Amazon
Available at iTunes
Available at Vudu

Fading Gigolo: A fifty-something New York florist becomes an unlikely sought after gigolo in a film from writer/director (and lead actor) John Turturro. He plays Fioravante who is brought into this new money making scheme by his best friend Murray (Woody Allen in a rare acting appearance in a film that he did not direct). When Murray’s dermatologist casually asks him if he knows of any good looking men who would be willing to participate in a threesome with her and her girlfriend, he volunteers Fioravante. Reluctant at first, Fioravante eventually agrees because he needs the money and thus begins their pimp and ho relationship. The arrangement is profitable, but becomes complicated when Fioravante become enamored with one of his clients, a young Hasidic widow.

The Final Member: Husavik, Iceland is the home to the only museum in the world devoted to preserving male genitalia. Curator Siggi Hjartarason has painstakingly collected specimens of male genitalia from creatures ranging from the field mouse to the massive member of the sperm whale. There is one thing that his museum is missing – a human penis. His quest to complete his collection appears to be coming to an end when he receives not one, but two volunteers: an elderly Icelandic man and an eccentric American. That turns out just to be the start as this documentary uses what is uncomfortably humorous subject matter to address three aging men who are addressing their legacy as they realize that they are heading towards the end of life.
Available at Amazon
Available at iTunes
Available at Vudu

Make Your Move: As a writer on Save the Last Dance and Step Up, Duane Adler is a veteran of the dance movie. He directs his first dance movie with Make Your Move. Dancing with the Stars’ Derek Hough plays Donny. He is on probation but potential jail time is not enough to keep him away from the lure of the underground dance scene. There he meets Aya (played by Korean pop star BoA). They come from two different worlds, but they speak the same language – dance. With choreography by Nappytabs (Tabitha and Napoleon D’umo) at least the dancing should be top notch.