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Dustin's Review

Capsule Review
All Cheerleaders Die  (2014)
2½ Stars
Directed by Lucky McKee and Chris Sivertson.
Cast: Caitlin Stasey, Sianoa Smit-McPhee, Brooke Butler, Amanda Grace Cooper, Reanin Johannink, Tom Williamson, Leigh Parker, Chris Petrovski, Nicholas S. Morrison, Jordan Wilson, Felisha Cooper.
2014 – 89 minutes
Not Rated (equivalent of an R for strong violence and gore, language, sexual content, nudity and drug use).
Reviewed by Dustin Putman, July 21, 2014.
If "Heathers" and "Jennifer's Body" decided to conceive at a woodsy kegger, "All Cheerleaders Die" would be the offspring. Seeming to be a loose zombified remake of that former 1989 high school satire and latter Diablo Cody-scripted 2009 horror-comedy, the film is actually already a remake—or is it a bigger-budgeted do-over?—of writer-directors Lucky McKee (2011's "The Woman") and Chris Sivertson (2007's "I Know Who Killed Me") still-unreleased 2001 effort of the same name. Now that these two have a little extra clout and experience behind them, they have decided to team up and tackle once more the wacked-out, girl-power-heavy tale of a troupe of cheerleaders who die in a nasty car accident and are resurrected through Wiccan classmate Leena's (Sianoa Smit-McPhee) black magic. They learn very quickly that they are dead and can only continue surviving through a little old-fashioned blood-sucking and cannibalism. Fortunately for them, there are a whole group of A-hole stoners and jocks who were partially responsible for their demise.

"All Cheerleaders Die" begins abrasively as Maddy (Caitlin Stasey) puts together what turns out to be a tribute video for ill-fated, pom-pom-shaking prima donna Lexi (Felisha Cooper). The moment she lands on her head during a routine toss gone horribly awry, the story reveals its twisted sense of humor. Following the maturity which McKee and Sivertson brought to their past individual work, the filmmaking partners show no pretenses here. The film is mostly all fun all the time, albeit one that does feel exceedingly familiar the longer it plays out. From the slow-motion walk through the school hallways to the ogling female bodies and tongue-in-cheek verbal interplay on display, "All Cheerleaders Die" is no longer as original as it might have been thirteen years ago. What keeps the movie energetic and resounding comes down to the astute performances from its actresses and the almost aching reality they bring to a premise both silly and ultimately tragic. Whether they're dead or not, growing up can be hell.
© 2014 by Dustin Putman
Dustin Putman