Watch Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal Movie Online No Survey Thure Lindhardt (Keep the Lights On) stars in this quirky dark comedy as Lars, a former darling of the art scene slipping away into the land of has-beens and struggling with lack of inspiration. His art dealer Ronny arranges a teaching job in a small town as a "therapeutic measure" to stir up some creative juices, but things never turn out quite as planned. At first, life in the peaceful small town seems rosy, as the young man settles in and impresses beautiful fellow colleague Leslie, by taking in the brawny, mute Eddie after the latter's caregiver passes away. But Lars soon discovers that the façade of serenity hides something unimaginable: Eddie suffers from a rare form of sleepwalking that transforms him from docile, cereal-obsessed art student into ravenous sleepwalking cannibal craving fresh meat. Initially horrified by Eddie's dark secret, Lars becomes enthralled by the not-so-gentle giant: at long last, here's the muse he'd been searching for high and low! Exceptional art does indeed come at a very high price, even the cost of human lives...and how far is Lars willing to go for his next masterpiece? Release Date Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal Apr 5, 2013 Limited | |
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Actors For Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal |
Thure Lindhardt,Dylan Smith,Georgina Reilly,Alain Goulem,Stephen McHattie |
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Genres Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : Horror,Art House & International,Comedy |
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User Ranting Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : 3.3 |
User Percentage For Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : % |
User Count Like for Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : 245 |
All Critics Ranting For Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : 5.5 |
All Critics Count For Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : 16 |
All Critics Percentage For Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal : 56 % |
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Review For Eddie The Sleepwalking Cannibal |
This deliberately tasteless horror-comedy might appeal to gore hounds and fans of gross-out humor; but as with many films that strive for cult status, any potential exploitation-movie pleasures are overwhelmed by an air of smug self-awareness. Ben Sachs-Chicago Reader
Thankfully, Lindhardt keeps things together with an appealing performance that constantly oscillates between drama and very light, dry humor without sacrificing the slightly otherworldly nature of his character. Boyd van Hoeij-Variety
This would-be cult item runs out of steam after its establishes its wickedly satirical premise. Frank Scheck-Hollywood Reporter
Despite the theme, "Eddie" goes easy on gratuitous gore. What we get is a cerebral horror movie and a satire of the art world. V.A. Musetto-New York Post
A flawed but diverting meditation on finding inspiration while losing your soul. Jeannette Catsoulis-New York Times
Allegedly a horror-comedy, it's neither comic nor, despite several scenes of a bloodied Smith in his tighty-whities, particularly horrifying ... David Fear-Time Out New York
Boris Rodriguez's movie sadly ends up being neither an effective horror movie nor a memorable satire. It just kind of, pardon me for going there, sleepwalks through its clever set-up. Brian Tallerico-HollywoodChicago.com
A quirky but unfulfilling Canadian-Danish horror-comedy that has a substantial helping of originality on its side, but not much in the way of inspired execution. Brent Simon-Shockya.com
It's not often I question content in a horror film, but after sleepwalking dully through Rodriguez's movie, I can only shrug and ask myself what just happened - with the least amount of interest. Matt Donato-We Got This Covered
A dark comedy driven by spot-on digs at academia, cutthroat art-world competition and the quest for inspiration. Maitland McDonagh-Film Journal International
Beneath the surface outrageousness lies a surprisingly, satisfyingly dark little fable about the essentially cannibalistic nature of artistic inspiration. Mike D'Angelo-AV Club
Because the film clearly aims for satire, Boris Rodriguez isn't entirely guilty of indulging gruesome spectacle for its own sake. Budd Wilkins-Slant Magazine
[VIDEO ESSAY] Fine-tuning the nuances cannibals, rather than zombies, proves modestly rewarding in a dark little comedy that owes more to Roger Corman's "Bucket of Blood" than it does to "Dawn of the Dead." Cole Smithey-ColeSmithey.com
An unlikely-buddy horror flick which figured a viable way of walking a fine line between the sadistic and the sublime. Kam Williams-Sly Fox
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