I just finished watching this one. I can agree with Reed on the "turn off your mind" technique. It's simple and harmless and borrows heavily from plenty of other genre stuff from the last....oh...50 years or so. Not that it's a bad thing. Michael Badalucco chews up as much scenery as the monster does victims. He's over-the-top, but the most interesting thing to watch in the movie. I will also give props to the cast. Not bad at all for this type of offering. I can definitely say that this one is easier to watch than most of the crappola offered up by "that channel."

The creature design gets an A for originality. We haven't seen this one before. Unfortunately, the Walmart CGI effects don't do it justice. You get plenty of glimpses of it out in the open, and in broad daylight, which was also refreshing. I guess the creative team wanted to show off their monster and not worry much about the details. Once again, props for that.

On the flip side, at least 90% of the budget was obviously spent on stage blood. Literally gallons of it was sprayed, splashed, smeared, shot and spewed everywhere. It bordered on the silly for me. They get a big black mark for killing Jennifer Rubin so early on. I can watch her in anything and for a long time. But, uuuh, that's the subjective part of my review.