Paintball Massacre | |
---|---|
Directed by | Darren Berry |
Written by | Chris Regan |
Produced by | Joe Hallett Brendan Carr |
Starring |
Katy Brand Lee Latchford-Evans |
Cinematography | Ola Mesmer |
Edited by | Daniel Jewell |
Music by | Patrick Gill |
Release dates |
|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Paintball Massacre is a 2020 British comedy horror film directed by Darren Berry and written by Chris Regan. [1]
A school reunion paintballing goes wrong as the participants start being murdered one by one. [2]
The filmmakers have cited British comedy-horror features Hot Fuzz and Dog Soldiers as inspiration. It was filmed in 2018 in Somerset, at The Sparkford Inn near Yeovil as well as in a quarry in Radstock. [3] The budget for the film was £75,000 which crept up to £100,000 when shooting began. [4]
The film was released in US and Canada in December 2020 and released digitally and on DVD in the UK on April 5, 2021. [5]
The Guardian review said the film struggles to live up to illustrious Brit comedy-horror predecessors. [6] Dread Central reviewed it as “Fun-Filled Microbudget Mayhem”. [7]
Paintball Massacre | |
---|---|
Directed by | Darren Berry |
Written by | Chris Regan |
Produced by | Joe Hallett Brendan Carr |
Starring |
Katy Brand Lee Latchford-Evans |
Cinematography | Ola Mesmer |
Edited by | Daniel Jewell |
Music by | Patrick Gill |
Release dates |
|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Paintball Massacre is a 2020 British comedy horror film directed by Darren Berry and written by Chris Regan. [1]
A school reunion paintballing goes wrong as the participants start being murdered one by one. [2]
The filmmakers have cited British comedy-horror features Hot Fuzz and Dog Soldiers as inspiration. It was filmed in 2018 in Somerset, at The Sparkford Inn near Yeovil as well as in a quarry in Radstock. [3] The budget for the film was £75,000 which crept up to £100,000 when shooting began. [4]
The film was released in US and Canada in December 2020 and released digitally and on DVD in the UK on April 5, 2021. [5]
The Guardian review said the film struggles to live up to illustrious Brit comedy-horror predecessors. [6] Dread Central reviewed it as “Fun-Filled Microbudget Mayhem”. [7]