You know in RuPaul's Drag Race when a queen enters a lip sync dressed in a massive tent, as if we don't know there is going to be a reveal?
That is how convincing the unattractive girls were in the beginning of the film.
You know in RuPaul's Drag Race when a queen enters a lip sync dressed in a massive tent, as if we don't know there is going to be a reveal?
That is how convincing the unattractive girls were in the beginning of the film.
You play stupid games
(write books on satanic cults)
You win stupid prices
(take care of a kidnapped nun raised in a satanic church, aided by your lavender couple friends who turn out to be terrible babysitters, while her father hides in a pentagram)
As a Norwegian watching a film written and directed by two Norwegians, labelled 'Norwegian horror' on Netflix, I have some feedback:
Speaking in various generican english accents, phoning 911, having American prescription bottles and calling the closest town 'Summerset', I can forgive.
But setting the film in the most Norwegian scenery and houses I have ever seen, and then having a character go buy liquor in the evenenig, when the sun sets at 11pm, and all liquor shops close at 6pm at the latest was just a step too far.