Metacritic Film

Club Dread

Starring Elena Lyons, Dan Montgomery Jr., Tanja Reichert, Nat Faxon, Michael Weaver, Kevin Heffernan, Michael Yurchak, and Jordan Ladd

MPAA RATING: R for violence/gore, sexual content, language and drug use

Fox Searchlight Pictures
Comedy  |  Horror  |  Suspense/Thriller
97 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters February 27, 2004

Surrounded by limber, wanton women on a booze-soaked island resort owned by rock star has-been Coconut Pete (Paxton), a non-stop party takes a turn for the weird when dead bodies start turning up faster than you could drink a rum punch. (Fox)

WRITTEN BY
Jay Chandrasekhar
Kevin Heffernan
Steve Lemme
Paul Soter and Erik Stolhanske

DIRECTED BY
Jay Chandrasekhar

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

45 / 100

Critic Reviews

75 Premiere
The Broken Lizard guys don't so much send up a genre as inhabit it, and subvert it from the inside.
70 The Onion (A.V. Club)
With "Super Troopers" and Club Dread, Broken Lizard has cranked out two genuinely funny movies in a row.
70 Village Voice Ben Kenigsberg
The group has a distinctive deadpan style; after you get on their wavelength, it's impossible to quit chuckling.
70 Film Threat
Broken Lizard manages to poke fun at the genre without falling into the trap of recycling old Scooby-Doo jokes.
63 New York Daily News
Pure dumb fun -- horror slapstick that rudely parodies both the arterial violence of slasher films and the topless hedonism of the spring-break ritual.
63 Chicago Sun-Times
There will be better movies playing in the same theater, even if it is a duplex, but on the other hand there is something to be said for goofiness without apology by broken lizards who just wanna have fun.
63 New York Post
This genre-busting hybrid is a scattershot affair - bad jokes land with a thud that seems to echo, but the winning ones prompt hearty laughs.
60 The Hollywood Reporter
Works better than one might think, thanks to the group's modus operandi, which combines a fundamental reverence for the target material and a sly irreverence that's key to their skewering technique.
60 Chicago Reader
As bad-taste comedies go, this is more clever than gross.
60 Empire Danny Graydon
Club Dread still thrives on the group's enormous charm and the determined, genuinely funny comedic approach of knowing pop-culture winks and a zaniness that marks them as pleasingly Pythonesque.
58 Entertainment Weekly
A few gags are brilliantly staged, but most have a smug, collegiate take-it-or-leave-it quality that makes full-on belly laughter feel optional.
50 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
A splatter of scenes that relocate the funny-bone in the lower anatomical regions -- sometimes hitting the mark, occasionally a glancing blow, often missing completely.
50 Washington Post Sara Gebhardt
Of course, the film still may be too bloody and crass for some, and it's by no means hilarious, but all things considered, Club Dread lives up to expectations, which were never really that high to begin with.
50 Austin Chronicle
It is really gory, for the record -– though it's too silly and insufficiently twisted to slake the appetite of the hardcore gorehound, it's not something to take a kid to.
50 TV Guide Ethan Alter
The film's biggest flaw is its excessive running time: The jokes start wearing thin after the first hour and, by the time the credits finally roll, it's become the kind of straightforward gorefest it started out ridiculing.
50 Dallas Observer
The Broken Lizard types bring the best out of Paxton, only to abandon him in the second half and focus on themselves. A bit more humility might have served them in better stead.
50 San Francisco Chronicle
If you enjoy gross humor -- elevated by an occasional witty line -- and looking at babes, and don't mind a little blood and gore, do I have a date movie for you.
42 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The new parody from the comedy troupe Broken Lizard, takes another swipe at the corpse armed with the same old weapons. This time, rigor mortis has set in.
40 The New York Times
Mr. Chandrasekhar's direction is casual to the point of carelessness, but he does give the movie a friendly, convivial atmosphere that contradicts and sometimes overcomes its frequently cruel humor. In short, this is another film that looks as if it was more fun to make than it is to sit through.
38 Chicago Tribune
The upside is that they're likable and play well together...The downside is that they're all still communicating roughly the same message, which lies somewhere between a wink and a nudge.
38 Philadelphia Inquirer
A slasher spoof of sorts, except that unlike the "Scream" pics, scant effort seems to have gone into the spoofing aspect of the story.
38 USA Today
The name is a tipoff: Club Dread is dreadful.
38 Boston Globe
A bumptious splatter farce that manages to improve from awful to moderately engaging as its cast is winnowed down to the five guys themselves.
30 Variety
A stunningly unfunny farce that makes the worst of a stale concept.
30 Washington Post
About as funny as malaria.
30 Los Angeles Times
Pretty dreadful.
30 LA Weekly
Chandrasekhar is a master forger of images and situations from horror movies past, but unlike Wes Craven did in "Scream," he doesn't build on them in any way, and the result is the opposite of what's intended; the movie is stultifying.
25 Charlotte Observer
Studios can release movies even more insultingly dumb, crudely assembled and cheaply produced than this one, though such an achievement will require some effort.

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