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Splinter DVD Review

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When people like to take a break from the real horrors going on in the world for a little freakout fantasy, Splinter is creepy enough to keep you on pins and needles for the duration, while at a safe enough distance on the screen. Directed by UK special effects whiz Toby Wilkins (Red Dragon), Splinter tosses in a little eco-terror too as genetically defective psycho fungi go mobile, and get a rabid hunger to attack and devour creature flesh, while inexplicably sprouting quills.

A movie in large part about eating and being eaten, Splinter takes place primarily at a rural pit stop combo convenience store and gas station, where what appears to be a nuclear hedgehog darts out of the woods and attacks a junk food snacking station attendant, and it's not his chips that the nasty creature is after. Not far from the messy impromptu picnic scene of the crime, camping college lovebirds Seth (Paulo Costanzo) and Polly (Jill Wagner) - who were on a getaway for a little 'anniversary sex under the stars' - are carjacked by fugitive con Dennis (Shea Whigham) and his mentally unhinged meth addict girlfriend, Lacey (Rachel Kerbs).

After the camper runs over the prickly monster in question, the couple on the lam and their two hostages in tow stop at the gas station to fill up the tank, now leaking after being pierced by those roadkill splinters. Soon the tables are turned as the humans find themselves barricaded collective hostages of the moldy monsters who are scampering about, when not engaging in a little flesh-devouring rooftop dining on half a state trooper who stops by, enough said.

Tensions abound in high alert mode throughout, while egghead biology grad student Seth locks horns with the redneck fugitive, in a conflict that sheds light on which social class might have the best survival skills in an emergency situation. There's also a life lesson to be learned here, when not breaking out in a collective audience cold sweat, about just what convenience store items qualify as coming in handy while warding off danger all around.

And in odd moments of emotional disorientation, the hostages begin to bond with their menacing jailbird captor with an in the closet heart of gold, as amputated hungry hands chase them periodically around the store. This, while the primary suspense lies in who will get fingered next, literally.

The scenario does veer into silly mode when the bio major takes time out to study the behavior patterns of the homicidal human porcupines, and figures out that since they like their dinner hot, he can outsmart them by turning himself into a human icepack, in effect a savior on ice.

Splinter does manage to get a grip on some thorny issues at hand, while excelling in fairly creative scaring skills. On a side note, no digital animals were likely harmed in the movie.

Image Entertainment
Rated R
3 stars

DVD Featurees; Behind The Scenes; Deleted Scenes; Featurettes: Making Of Splinter; Scoring Splinter:; Creating The Title Sequence; Audio Commentary: Tom Sizemore, Actor; Michael D. Olmos, Director; Adrian A. Cruz, Producer; Theatrical Trailer.

Prairie Miller is a multimedia journalist online, in print and on radio. Contact her through NewsBlaze.

Prairie Miller
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