Murder Collection V.1

Murder Collection V.1 is a 2009 American horror anthology film written and directed by Fred Vogel, and co-written by Don Moore, Shelby Vogel and Jerami Cruise.[1][2]

Murder Collection V.1
DVD released by Toetag Pictures
Directed byFred Vogel
Produced byShelby Vogel
Written byFred Vogel
Don Moore
Jerami Cruise
Shelby Lyn Vogel
Story byFred Vogel
Don Moore
Jerami Cruise
Shelby Lyn Vogel
Music byDie Toten
CinematographyFred Vogel
Shelby Lyn Vogel
Robert L. Lucas
Edited byJason Kollat
J. Harland Lockhart
Rick Weller
Production
company
Toetag Pictures
Distributed byToetag Pictures
Release date
  • May 1, 2009 (2009-05-01) (United States)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Russian
Japanese

Plot

The film's opening explains that in 1994 a web series called Murder, which broadcast footage of actual deaths and acts of violence, appeared. After being active for four months, Murder was shut down by the authorities and had all of its content confiscated, though the website's host, a man known only as Balan, evaded capture. Now, years later, Balan has reemerged to share more clips that he has unearthed, while also offering commentary on people's obsession with death, the effect it has on them, and how accessible new media has made it. The series of videos is kicked off by Balan querying, "I ask you all... Why are you watching? Are you trying to find reality? Do you feel the need to be shocked? To witness something that human eyes shouldn't see? Murder is reality. Death comes when you least expect it. With what you are about to observe, you may question your own integrity. You will ask, could this happen to me? My answer to you is... Yes it can."

  • Bludgeoning: A drunk Russian man accidentally beats his teenage son to death in front of the son's webcam.
  • The Heist: A restaurant's security system records a robbery committed by four gunmen, who shoot a cashier in the head and a fleeing customer in the back.
  • The Cheat: In front of a stationary camera a man, Greg reminisces about how he met his wife, and about all of the good times that they shared, while a monitor in the background shows his wife having sex with someone else. The man leaves the room, and the monitor shows him barging in on his wife and her lover, hacking the former to death with an ax before cutting out her heart, which the wife had once said would always belong to him.
  • S&G: A parking lot security camera catches two people attacking a couple, beating the man with a baseball bat, and abducting the woman.
  • Broadway Rob: The distorted home movie of a pedophile, Broadway Rob who forces two gagged boys, Shawn and Ben clad in only their socks and underwear to dance with him. Shawn tackles Rob, fatally strangling and stabbing him. Shawn and Ben flee, leaving Rob's dead body behind.
  • Execution: A muffled black-and-white camcorder video of a hooded and masked group (possibly a cult or a gang) executing a man via decapitation in front of a woman, whom they taunt with the severed head before shooting her.
  • ATM: A man is mugged and killed at an ATM.
  • Autopsy: Japanese autopsy footage of a woman who was shot in the mouth, with the bullet exiting the top of her skull. The coroner eventually kicks the cameraman out due to his unprofessional antics and inattentiveness.
  • Bullied: A trio of drunks use a camcorder to record themselves taking a man out into the woods under the pretense of initiating him into their group. The three bully and humiliate the man and, during a scuffle, one of them accidentally knocks him onto the knife another was holding. The trio panic and bicker, and the camera is dropped when a fight breaks out over whether they should go for help.
  • Homecoming: A building security camera records two figures garroting a man.
  • Ransom: A deteriorated series of ransom videos depict three men brutalizing a senator's daughter, who eventually dies due to the severity of her injuries.

After the last clip, Balan delivers the closing statement, "You realize now it's everywhere. Death casts a shadow on all our faces. The new media shines light on dank crevasses, revealing moral decay and broken experiences that are better left beyond the pale. Goosebumps explode on my skin with every clip we watch. I feel it now more than ever. How do you feel?"

Reception

Ryan Doom of Arrow in the Head gave Murder Collection V.1 a 2/4 and wrote, "In the end, I think it's an interesting exercise, but I don't know if it makes it a good movie. This isn't the type of film that I suspect most viewers would revisit often, if at all. Instead, it's just an experiment that people will dig or not, depending on how much violence and gore they can stomach without a story for context. While it captivated me at times with certain segments, others seemed unnecessary or overdone. But maybe that's just me".[3] Horror News's Jay Alan praised the special effects, also calling the acting "convincingly believable for the most part" and writing, "As much as the film focuses on the graphic and dark nature of death, it also delves into the human psyche and personalities of the characters within the little given time shown."[4]

References

  1. Steve Jones (2013). Torture Porn: Popular Horror after Saw. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 174. ISBN 9781137317124. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  2. Alexandra Heller-Nicholas (2014). Found Footage Horror Films: Fear and the Appearance of Reality. McFarland & Company. p. 194. ISBN 9780786470778. Archived from the original on 7 May 2017. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  3. Doom, Ryan. "Murder Collection V.1". joblo.com. Arrow in the Head. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
  4. Alan, Jay (2 November 2011). "Film Review: Murder Collection Vol. 1 (2009)". horrornews.net. Horror News. Retrieved 25 February 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.