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L.A. Slasher
Incensed by tawdry excesses of reality television that promotes this new breed of 'celebrities,' the L.A. Slasher, a self-appointed cultural crusader, kidnaps several very famous nobodies, which leads the media and the general public to question if perhaps society is better off without them.

















26 August 1988, Seattle, Washington, USA


2 October 1982, Hazleton, Pennsylvania, USA



5 November 1982, State College, Pennsylvania, USA

14 February 1950, Evanston, Illinois, USA

15 May 1985, Riverton, Wyoming, USA

18 January 1969, Washington, District of Columbia, USA



June 25, 2015
A good-looking effort but offers no threat, positioning itself as dangerous, chic, and wise when it's mostly muddled and poorly edited.
June 25, 2015
Even the most talentless and narcissistic fame seekers on reality television are not nearly as vile, reprehensible or worthless as a film that actively wishes harm on them.
July 14, 2015
Fairly awful and useless.
June 20, 2015
It inflates the meta conceit (already borderline overblown) of a pop-obsessed, sex-negative serial killer to excessive but trite proportions.
June 26, 2015
This bloody attempt at satire suffers from comparisons to other movies that did the same thing much better, but also from a flat, facile approach that renders everything slick, soulless, and vacuous.
June 24, 2015
The masked Slasher is voiced by Andy Dick, because nothing gives weight to your criticism of reality TV like having it stated by a guy who appeared in Celebrity Wife Swap.