TOTALLY KILLER, 80s Slasher Meets BACK TO THE FUTURE – Armessa Movie News

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Meeting your mother when you’re both teens can do a serious number on your head (e.g., the Back to the Future trilogy). Meeting your mom as a teen when there’s a serial killer targeting your teen mom and her circle of friends, however, can lead to an altogether different set of problems, beginning — and quite possibly ending — with saving your mother from said serial killer milliseconds before you start up your time machine and head back to the future (i.e, 2023).

That premise drives Nahnatchka Khan’s (Always Be My Maybe) latest film, Totally Killer, a sci-fi/slasher hybrid that leans heavily — sometimes too heavily — on two hyper-exaggerated versions of America, our current, presumably more enlightened one, versus the America of 1987 and its reliance on cultural, ethnic, and other related stereotypes. Seen from our superior position, living in the late 1980s, free-roaming serial killer aside, was filled with said stereotypes, ill-fitting, oversized clothes and, at least on the positive side, a steady release of one pop-music banger after another (e.g., Bananarama, New Order, Echo and the Bunnymen).

Story-wise, Totally Killer focuses on a present-day teen, Jamie Hughes (Kiernan Shipka), as petulant, self-involved, and willful as apparently any teen anywhere, who’s repeatedly run afoul of her parental unit, Pam (Julie Bowen), a suffocatingly overprotective mom. Pam, though, has good reason for her behavior toward Jamie: 35 years ago, a still uncaught killer, murdered three of her classmates and friends, Tiffany Clark (Liana Liberato), Marisa Song (Stephi Chin-Salvo), and Heather Hernandez (Anna Diaz), in a spree that lasted six days before disappearing without a trace. Inarguably, the wrenching, permanent loss of her friends left a permanent mark on her psyche.

In addition to the now standard generational trauma passed down from Pam to Jamie, the so-called “Sweet Sixteen Killer” also left a whole host of unanswered questions, but for Jamie, it’s old news that’s best left in the past. For Jamie, her mother’s protestations are just another obstacle to overcome, but when the killer — the same or possibly a copycat — returns, promising an an-new body count, Jamie conveniently, if also accidentally, jumps into her best friend Amelia Creston’s (Kelcey Mawema) untested time machine disguised as an old fairground photo booth.

Without additional time-wasting on explanations or paradoxes, Jamie finds herself in 1987, days before the Sweet Sixteen Killer murdered his first victim. Deciding then and there to change history, save the killer’s victims, and more importantly, meet and chill out with her teen mom (Olivia Holt), Jamie thinks she has a near-foolproof to fix the past and create a better future. That plan lasts as long as it takes for Jamie to meet teen Pam, a preening, self-involved, egocentric mean girl and charter member of the Mollys, a Heathers-inspired clique that includes Pam and the three future victims, and runs their high school with their caustic, condescending wit and ability to make anyone an outcast or pariah with a collective nod of their well-coifed heads.

Jamie enlists the aid of Amelia’s (teen) mom, Lauren (Troy L. Johnson) — like her daughter, a big-brained science-hero obsessed with time travel — to repair the now broken time machine while also doubling as her new best friend and guide to the bizarrely outdated social and cultural mores of late-80s America. Credited to David Matalon, Sasha Perl-Raver, and Jen D’Angelo, the script compares and contrasts Jamie’s heightened sensitivities with the crass, crude, rude humor of 80s teens. It’s meant as a source of humor and comedy, though it often works as a mild, modest parody of 80s teen comedies and slashers.

The story picks up when Jamie’s initial attempts fail, revealing her presence to the killer, one among many suspects Totally Killer passes in front of the cameras, from the most blatantly obvious to the least, and she, through her own efforts or the Pam-led clique, becomes, if not a target, then an obstacle the killer has to overcome by any bloody and/or gory means necessary. That, in turn, somewhat predictably leads to several interlinked set pieces of varying quality and interest, one at an adult-free high-school party filled with drunk, stoned, horny teens, the other in a literal “cabin in the woods,” before climaxing at the fairgrounds where Lauren hopes to send Jamie back to her own time regardless of whether the killer has been stopped.

Liberally borrowing from 40-year-old teen slashers and teen comedies, Totally Killer doesn’t exactly reinvent either genre. Neither does it do anything particularly inventive with sci-fi/slasher premise, but what it does, up to and including centering the film on the self-aware, resourceful Jamie, desperate to avoid final girl status, her co-conspirators in time travel both in 2023 and 1987, and enough breezy, lightweight, superficial humor to get audiences through occasional lulls and rough patches.

In short, Totally Killer passes the “stop, check out the synopsis, and hit play” requirements needed to make it a more than passable time-waster in the weeks leading to Halloween proper.

Totally Killer premiered at Fantastic Fest 2023. It begins streaming on Friday, October 6, 2023, via Prime Video.

Totally Killer

Writer(s)
  • David Matalon
  • Sasha Perl-Raver
  • Jen D’Angelo
Cast
  • Kiernan Shipka
  • Olivia Holt
  • Charlie Gillespie



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