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In a remote bar, a newcomer advises the customers to seal the place up, as a horde of ravenous, flesh-eating monster will soon attack them. Now the strangers must band together for survival.
The first two "Project Greenlight" films got only brief local runs. Feast isn't likely to do much better.
September 30, 2006
PopMatters
Feast is too knowing and in its own way, too high profile to be born as cult cinema. But it's a reasonable facsimile and as such deserves a look from the genre connoisseur.
[Director John Gulager] shows a little flair for the genre, though the editing is so frenetic you really can't see what's going on (a blessing, considering how cheesy the monsters look and move).
September 22, 2006
Film4
amidst all the gleeful profanity, gross character stereotyping, outrageous interspecies rape and gory grotesquery, an apparent lack of originality is the one thing that should not cause undue offence here.
Who knows what might have happened if he had the time and the leverage to smooth out the rough edges, but material this junky can only be salvaged for so much scrap.
September 23, 2006
San Francisco Chronicle
While the reality television series that chronicled the making of this low-budget horror film last year was extremely entertaining, the piece of cinema that resulted is kind of a bore.