IMDb RATING
5.8/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
In order to save her siblings, a young woman takes on her father and the powerful entity known as Gamemaster, who ensnares humans into diabolical plots while her species gambles on the outco... Read allIn order to save her siblings, a young woman takes on her father and the powerful entity known as Gamemaster, who ensnares humans into diabolical plots while her species gambles on the outcome.In order to save her siblings, a young woman takes on her father and the powerful entity known as Gamemaster, who ensnares humans into diabolical plots while her species gambles on the outcome.
- Awards
- 11 wins & 10 nominations total
Morena Baccarin
- Gamemaster
- (voice)
William Shatner
- The Overseer
- (voice)
Ray Wise
- Cyrus DeKalb
- (voice)
Damien C. Haas
- Ethan DeKalb
- (voice)
Bill Moseley
- Pavel
- (voice)
Mark Whitten
- Walt
- (voice)
- …
Bill Millsap
- Clay
- (voice)
- …
Tom Lommel
- Det. Lang
- (voice)
- …
Benjamin Siemon
- Collin DeKalb
- (voice)
Jim Cirile
- Barbarian Gambler
- (voice)
- …
Jason Axinn
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Dani Lennon
- Miriam DeKalb
- (voice)
Tanya Klein
- 80s Gambler
- (voice)
- (as Tanya C. Klein)
Steve Geiger
- Jurek Klar
- (voice)
- …
Charles Wyman
- Cop 3
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Definitely not any of the award-hype it promised. If you've seen any of the motion comics that came on the web 15 years ago, this is the same thing, but in a 90-minute movie form instead of broken down into 5-10 minute TV shorts, which was the old format. The story itself is reminiscent of a low-grade '80s B-movie, in that it's a bit out there and convoluted, which is why I would say this is not a modern B-movie. Basically, it's a whacky '80s time-travel B-movie for 12-yr-olds with elements of Saw, so, the two genres don't really work together. The writer should have picked one or the other and stuck with it. Like, if the writer would have cut out the Robocop or Tron, evil corporation, sophomoric cheese, and stuck with the evil-rich-dad thing, kept it standard horror, and been more inventive than ripping Saw, maybe Blumhouse or someone would have ponied up a few mill to produce the script. And with that version of the script tightened, and live-action, maybe I would have enjoyed it well enough.
I was at least willing to give the story a shot, since after the first painful 10 minutes, it started to peak my interest. It's just very hard to get into the After Effects puppet animation, especially when you know it's going to be for 90 minutes, rather than what it's typically used for, which is small doses. Whatever budget they had would have been better spent on a live-action short. I get the sense the writer or director was trying to show what they could do with a budget. The storyboard sequencing, expressed in comic book form was pretty good. I could picture it, and the music was good enough. The voice acting was good or bad, depending on the actor. The writing was mediocre...but, like I said, if some of the other elements are there, I can be perfectly entertained by a B-movie, since my expectations are generally low. So, a silly, mediocre script can work, just not with stiff, puppet animation.
To make this work, the story either needed to be excellent, or the animation had to be a lot better, or good live-action. As a whole, it didn't work for a full movie. I do appreciate the effort. I am a fan of animation, comics, and B-movies, it just didn't work for me. I would say for the director to keep at it, just maybe work harder at the basics before going the full movie route.
I was at least willing to give the story a shot, since after the first painful 10 minutes, it started to peak my interest. It's just very hard to get into the After Effects puppet animation, especially when you know it's going to be for 90 minutes, rather than what it's typically used for, which is small doses. Whatever budget they had would have been better spent on a live-action short. I get the sense the writer or director was trying to show what they could do with a budget. The storyboard sequencing, expressed in comic book form was pretty good. I could picture it, and the music was good enough. The voice acting was good or bad, depending on the actor. The writing was mediocre...but, like I said, if some of the other elements are there, I can be perfectly entertained by a B-movie, since my expectations are generally low. So, a silly, mediocre script can work, just not with stiff, puppet animation.
To make this work, the story either needed to be excellent, or the animation had to be a lot better, or good live-action. As a whole, it didn't work for a full movie. I do appreciate the effort. I am a fan of animation, comics, and B-movies, it just didn't work for me. I would say for the director to keep at it, just maybe work harder at the basics before going the full movie route.
- plasticanimalz
- Mar 27, 2021
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn Miriam's office, a poster on the wall reads "REACH FOR THE STARS". The man depicted on the poster is the late astronomer, educator, and author Carl Sagan.
- GoofsDuring the math test, one question relates to the divisibility rules: "Is 52462 divisible by 4?" Cyrus says "add all the numbers together, if the sum is divisible by 4, then the answer is yes." This is actually the rule for 3 and 9, not 4. A number is divisible by 4 when the last two digits are divisible by 4.
- Quotes
Cyrus DeKalb: You turned on me. Fucking turned! On me!
- How long is To Your Last Death?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Hasta tu última muerte
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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