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IMDbPro

Malevolence 3: Killer

  • 2018
  • R
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
Katie Gibson in Malevolence 3: Killer (2018)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:23
1 Video
52 Photos
Horror

Martin Bristol returns to where it all began: the home where he was kidnapped from. But he is not the boy who disappeared over 10 years ago. Tortured and abused at the hands of his psychotic... Read allMartin Bristol returns to where it all began: the home where he was kidnapped from. But he is not the boy who disappeared over 10 years ago. Tortured and abused at the hands of his psychotic captor, Graham Sutter, Martin is damaged beyond repair. Lurking in the shadows of suburbi... Read allMartin Bristol returns to where it all began: the home where he was kidnapped from. But he is not the boy who disappeared over 10 years ago. Tortured and abused at the hands of his psychotic captor, Graham Sutter, Martin is damaged beyond repair. Lurking in the shadows of suburbia, he stalks and kills without remorse. Special Agent William Perkins follows Martin's tra... Read all

  • Director
    • Stevan Mena
  • Writer
    • Stevan Mena
  • Stars
    • Katie Gibson
    • Kevin McKelvey
    • Victoria Mena
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stevan Mena
    • Writer
      • Stevan Mena
    • Stars
      • Katie Gibson
      • Kevin McKelvey
      • Victoria Mena
    • 44User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Malevolence 3: Killer
    Trailer 1:23
    Malevolence 3: Killer

    Photos52

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    + 48
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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Katie Gibson
    • Ellie
    Kevin McKelvey
    Kevin McKelvey
    • Special Agent Perkins
    Victoria Mena
    • Victoria
    Adrienne Barbeau
    Adrienne Barbeau
    • Meredith Bristol
    Ashley Wolfe
    Ashley Wolfe
    • Katherine Bristol
    Scott Decker
    • Agent Roland
    Reed Davis
    • Tom
    Graceann Dorse
    Graceann Dorse
    • Agent Jones
    David Lee Madison
    • Agent Smith
    Lynn Mastio Rice
    • Georgianna Pritchett
    Jay Cohen
    • Martin Bristol
    Alli Caudle
    • Lynn
    Kelsey Deanne
    • Tara
    Scott Kay
    • John
    Todd Litzinger
    • Simon
    Andy Striph
    • Carl
    Keith B. Kunkel
    • Van Driver
    Rich Willing
    • Storage Unit Manager
    • Director
      • Stevan Mena
    • Writer
      • Stevan Mena
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews44

    4.62.4K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    2arfdawg-1

    Ignore the Phony Reviews

    If you look not so carefully you'll note that qll the reviews that give this a 9 0r 10 have similar headers. FAKE REVIEWS.

    This is my HONEST assessment of the film.

    The production values are better than a lot of the really bad horror films out there but that doesnt make this a good movie.

    In fact, it's pretty awful.

    The acting is atrocious and the directing is that of a high school student. One has to wonder how someone put up $750K for this crap.

    And folks, can you stop with the brooding music already? It's been doe over and over and now it's just annoying. Stephen Mena should not be allowed to make another picture
    6pdg-55625

    If you like slasher films, especially 80s, you'll like it

    I would have given it a 5.5 if I could, but since we round up here on IMDB I went with 6. Many of the commenters are right when they say it has strong "Halloween" vibes. Sure it's a bit cliche at times, but it's a slasher, and an homage to 80s slasher films, so that's to be expected. It's apart of the genre. I liked it in general. The acting was good and certainly better than most 80s slasher casts. Story was solid enough. And as someone who's always liked 80s horror it was nostalgic. People giving it a 1 are just trying to manipulate the rating in my opinion, and if you like 80s slasher films, I think you'll like it.
    3bandit-26905

    Wast of the time

    Cheap story. The funny thing is nothing can hurt the killer seriously.
    2henriquedematos

    The worst kind of bad movie: the unremarkable one

    So, assume the quality of a film can be represented on a spectrum. In one extreme, you have the best possible films, and in the other, the worst possible ones. It sounds intuitive that, as viewers who are looking to have a positive experience, it would be in our best interest to only watch cinema that is closer to the good side of the spectrum, and yet, somehow, most of us can recognize there's actually plenty of enjoyment in watching a distinctively bad film unfold before our eyes. This, I'll argue, often has to do with how raw and genuine the artistic vision of a bad director tends to be: whether it is Tommy Wiseau's "The Room", James Nguyen's "Birdemic" or the entire filmography of Neil Breen, all of these are unified by the fact that they are auteur films where a madman is using his rudimentary knowledge of cinematic language to express his most intimate will, providing us with such joy in the process to the point where watching them might actually produce the same sort of pleasing mental phenomena we get from a genuinely good film, perhaps even raising some interesting questions about the nature of our own aesthetic judgement.

    The problem is, there's clearly an artistic vision behind Stevan Mena's Malevolence 3: it's trying really hard to be a throwback to 1980s slasher horror, with the antagonist fundamentally being a legally distinct version of Michael Myers and the narrative sharing the same sort of structure you'd expect from a Friday the 13th film, and yet, somehow, it never gets to the point of actually invoking that sensation of authorship. The direction is profoundly incompetent, on the first 10 minutes alone you'll find everything from poor editing choices (the film starts with a static frontal shot of a house and then cuts to a pan that goes from a tree to the exact same house, as if it's only now establishing a location) to poor performances (the very first line delivery sounds hilariously unnatural) and the occasional rubbish ADR (two characters have a conversation where one of them was clearly recorded in post with an entirely different microphone), however, despite these blunders, the actual camerawork and sound quality is just average enough to pass for an actual movie - and interestingly, that's actually to its detriment, since it turns a potential so-bad-it's-good experience into one where it's just a bad film plagued by jarring issues all around.

    Narrative-wise, Malevolence 3 can be boiled down to every single slasher movie ever made, like it's built around a generic blank slate that's the filmmaking equivalent of a videogame asset flip. There's a mysterious mute killer on the loose in a small suburban American town, and there are a couple of teenagers who decide to spend the night over together, and I mean, it's not hard to see where it goes from here. Unsurprisingly, most characters have no more development than the most basic stock archetypes - you see, one of the girls dresses immodestly and has loud sex in her bedroom, which means she's the extroverted dirtbag character, whereas the other one reads books and refuses to engage in premarital intercourse, which means she is the pure and kind-hearted one! - and their arches primarily consist of being inert cannon fodder for the really bland and rudimentar kill scenes, eventually leaving no room to any actual character growth. Equally pitiful is the attempt at trying to establish a historical setting: apparently, the film is meant to be set during the 90s, and director Mena seems to think that merely adding an old iMac to the protagonists' bedroom and having some characters driving around in a Mercury sedan is enough to fully convince the spectator of that, never mind the obviously contemporary fashion, interior decoration, dialectic mannerisms and the 2010s police Dodge Charger just all making their way into the frame throughout the length of the film. And although I guess directly commenting on the ending would no longer make this a spoiler-free review (as much as there's anything worth spoiling), it might suffice to say that, if you've watched any sequel to a slasher that's trying to set itself up as a franchise, you probably know exactly how it's going to go.

    The final product, above all, feels like an attempt at trying to appease to an old school crowd that grew up with the traditional 80s horror formula whilst failing to understand how that exact same formula is still in excessive use today, making this an utterly pointless effort in trying to recapture something that's already over-saturating cinema in the first place. It's not that throwback retro horror is inherently bad by itself, David Robert Mitchell's "It Follows" is an excellent example of that exact same sort of nostalgia done right: it retains the atmospheric wide shots, the night lighting and the hard synth soundtrack that wouldn't be out of place in a John Carpenter film, but it backs all of that with a far more sophisticated use of movement, composition, sound and editing, coupled with a narrative that explores some philosophically introspective reflections about sexuality and mortality, in a way that actually outgrows most of Carpenter's filmography and instead becomes its own thing. Ultimately, the fundamental difference between the concept of these two films is that Mitchell primarily took the aesthetics of his reference and added his own substance into it, while Mena is stuck with the vague ideal of a slasher movie that cannot have any more substance than its basic layout. In the end, it's no surprise that the result is just dull, derivative and painfully unremarkable.
    1dusan-22

    Ignore the high rating

    The movie director has seen Halloween for sure and was pretty inspired but didn't really know how to express that. This is why he made such a dull and ridiculous film. It was an amateur attempt to make a fiction movie. Malevolence 3: Killer is full of bad acting, bad editing and pretty long scenes that look like a first movie making task at film-making school. If you are a horror fan, don't waste your time on this pile of rubbish.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Katie Gibson (Elle), the main character was also mentioned as credited in second movie in the series trilogy Bereavement (2010), as voice next door.
    • Goofs
      Martin Bristol was kidnapped in 1989 and the second film took place 10 years later which makes the third film a direct continuation and that would put the year at 1999 or 2000 at the latest. The jeep that is being driven has a digital HD display that wouldn't have existed.
    • Connections
      Follows Malevolence (2003)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 22, 2019 (India)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Злоумышленник 3: Убийца
    • Filming locations
      • Allentown, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production company
      • Mena Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $75,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 29 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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