Phobe: The Xenophobic Experiments

1995 "Created, Used, Discarded, Destroyed. Now they are back."
4.3| 1h21m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 05 March 1995 Released
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website: http://phobe.ca/
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An Ex Military specialist is called in one last time to recover deadly military experiment (PHOBE) who has escaped. Tracking the PHOBE to a small planet called Earth, Dapp must stop the Phobe and destroy the egg within 72 hours.

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Cast

Director

Erica Benedikty

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Phobe: The Xenophobic Experiments Audience Reviews

Alicia I love this movie so much
Vashirdfel Simply A Masterpiece
FeistyUpper If you don't like this, we can't be friends.
AnhartLinkin This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.
Leofwine_draca PHOBE: THE XENOPHOBIC EXPERIMENTS is your usual no-budget indie science fiction film that follows the misadventures of a bunch of military types on the hunt for a renegade alien menace. As usual it's shot in a backwards woods somewhere with a very cheap and dated filming style thanks to the analogue look. The film's biggest problem is the PG rating which robs it of much of the interest that a B-movie fan would have. It was made for just $250, so I suppose we shouldn't complain about it so much. The roaming alien only appears at the climax and turns out to be a guy dressed in a ghillie suit and papier mache mask.
Woodyanders Rough'n'ready renegade ex-military specialist Sgt. Gregory Dapp (dumpy John Rubeck, who rocks one hell of a wicked mullet) gets assigned to recover a lethal experiment called Phobe (Merv Wrighton in a funky costume) that has escaped to Earth.Despite amateurish acting from a game, but lame no-name cast, cut-rate (not so) special effects, and raggedy shot-on-video cinematography, writer/director Erica Benedikty's Do-It-Yourself indie opus nonetheless still possesses a certain raw vitality, lots of shoot-the-moon ambition, and a positively infectious go-for-it enthusiasm that's impossible to either dislike or resist. Moreover, the exciting action set pieces are staged with considerable brio, plenty of stuff blows up real good, and the pulsating synthesizer score hits the stirring spot. Hugely enjoyable.