Venom

Synopsis: SPOILER: Eric and his Yankee teenage mates travel South by motorbike to a swampy backwater town in Louisiana, where Sean's father Ray lived, the local tow truck driver, who abandoned the then baby-boy and his mother. Ray recently died, while trying to rescue a voodoo witch and at her urging her trunk, which got opened and released the poisonous serpents possessed by the souls of truly evil sinners she trapped in them. Ray was bitten and possessed as the car sunk, and shortly after it's dragged out rises as an 'undead' zombie, who murders without provocation and is immune to lethal weapons. He soon finds the teens' trace and proves his indiscriminately evil blood-thirst by charging his only offspring equally lethally. However they were warned by Eden's friend Cece, the witch's granddaughter, who explained the situation in her home and assures them when the zombie attacks it's safe thanks to a 'blessed' spell preventing evil from entering; alas the chain- and crowbar-waving undead finds
Director(s): Jim Gillespie
Production: Miramax
 
IMDB:
4.7
Metacritic:
25
Rotten Tomatoes:
11%
R
Year:
2005
87 min
$811,035
Website
14,075 Views


I feel great, man.

I get it. You live in an armpit.

What is so wrong with this town, huh?

Besides archaic beliefs

and backward mentality?

Hey, come on, I like it here.

- Sean?

- What?

We're almost drunk.

Can we have a little more booze, please?

- That's all.

- You're the best.

So you're just gonna stare at her

through plate glass all night?

She doesn't want to talk.

- I can tell by her posture.

- Pos...

Did you see that?

Eden.

- Are you OK?

- Yeah.

No, it started raining.

- You and Eric will work everything out.

- Oh, yeah? How's that?

Hm... I have a feeling

for these kind of things.

Have some.

Hey, Ray.

How are you doing tonight?

- All right, I guess.

- Got your order all ready.

Here you go, Ray.

Have a good one.

- That man gives me the weebies.

- It's just a scar, Rachel.

Forget the scar.

It's his eyes, the way he stares you down.

Freaky.

So tell me, is that synthetic leather?

We got it at Lacey's in Baton Rouge.

You got it at Lacey's. I was in Barnes and

Noble. Do not make me part of your felony.

- You stole it?

- Well, I wasn't gonna buy it. It's too ugly.

And I felt bad taking a nice one.

I have a conscience.

- You're still a crook.

- Yeah, a crook with a nice rack.

Don't you think?

You may not want

to pull those out too often.

- Ray!

- What are you doing? Stop!

- Ray! Hey, Ray!

- Tammy!

- Yeah, you like that?

- Tammy! That redneck ain't right.

So long, sucker!

- Come on.

- You're not touching my hair.

What?

You don't trust me? I'm offended.

Mitzi said if I get my license, she'll give me

a chair and I can build up my clientele.

Mitzi will have to die

before you get a clientele.

She rolls around on a stool now, cutting

hair and doing color. It will not be long.

I can wait.

- That's getting embarrassing.

- Tuition, car payment.

Tuition, car payment.

"Who's the scrub on the bike?"

"Oh, that's Dr. Sinclair.

She clips coupons, too."

- Good night, Rachel.

- Good night, Eden.

Eden.

Eden, come on.

- What's going on?

- You broke up with me, Eric.

What are you talking about?

You broke up with me.

I said we should

get serious about me going away.

Yeah, to LSU, not Columbia.

The grants came through.

What was I meant to do?

How about telling me

you applied to Columbia in the first place?

I knew you'd get upset.

Oh, so you'd announce one day, "Oh, by

the way, I'm going to school in New York."

Not Baton Rouge like we'd planned. We

were gonna see each other on weekends.

There is nothing here for me.

I mean, you have your dad's business.

Be realistic.

I'm gonna have to move away.

Listen.

You can't be a doctor here?

I don't want this town.

Are you sure?

Or is it me you don't want?

Great.

Everything OK here?

Actually, Ray, we're kind of in the middle

of something, you know? Private.

- Is this boy giving you trouble?

- No.

No, Ray, it's OK.

We're just talking.

Bridge ain't nowhere to park a car, boy.

- Use some sense.

- Thanks, Ray.

- Jesus!

- Who is it?

- It's Cece's grandmother.

- See what you've done?

- You were on the wrong side of the road.

- Look where your car is!

Both of you just shut up. She just moved.

Miss Emmie, are you OK?

Eric, no!

Ray! Help us!

Get out of the way.

- I'll take hold of her and pass her off, OK?

- OK.

It's OK. I got you.

The suitcase.

The suitcase, please.

You must... Oh, please...

Please... you must...

- It's OK. It's OK.

- You must...

You must...

OK. It's OK.

It's gonna be OK.

It's gonna be OK.

- What are you doing?

- Give me a second.

- Come on, Ray. Get the hell out of the car.

- It's OK, kid.

Please, just stay...

Ray!

Ray! No!

Ray! Ray!

- No!

- Eric, no!

F***!

Oh, my God.

Get me up to speed.

What's going on?

Junior and the man got him out.

But they can't do much

about the car until the tide drops.

Jesus.

Something got a hold of him good

down there.

Messed him up real bad.

Damn swamp's full of snakes.

Check this out.

They retrieved it from the car.

What is that?

Some kind of Veve.

Old-time Creole.

My granddaddy

got stories about that woman.

Keep you up nights.

Look here. I want this bridge secured

and this road cleared.

Hold on, now.

My day off started two hours ago.

- How am I supposed to tow a tow truck?

- Goddammit, boy, hop to it.

Sh*t.

It was an accident, Eric.

They're both dead.

I should have gone in.

I should have tried to save him.

So what?

That you could have drowned too?

I should have done something.

Sheriff!

- Was there a suitcase?

- I'm sorry, child?

Was there a suitcase in the car?

Yeah, there was.

We pulled it out. It was empty.

Oh, my God. Oh, my God.

Cece, are you OK?

- What happened?

- It was an accident.

What happened to Ray?

They said he was in the car.

The car went in the water.

He drowned.

Is that true?

Either that or the swamp snakes got him.

We don't know for sure.

Oh, my God.

I need to go to my grandma's house.

- Take me to my grandma's house.

- You don't want to be there alone.

Please, please. My dad, he's in Biloxi.

He'll be there till Sunday.

Can you please just take me

to my grandmother's house?

All right. I'll take you.

Snakes.

I'm telling you.

I don't know, some damn swamp snakes

chewed his ass up.

I swear to Jesus. It's a mess.

I ain't seen nothing like this

since old man Hardy died in that mill fire.

Hold on a second.

Sorry about that.

He had a death rattle.

Rate this script:5.0 / 2 votes

Flint Dille

Flint Dille (born November 3, 1955) is an American screenwriter, game designer, and novelist. He is best known for his animated work on Transformers, G.I. Joe, An American Tail: Fievel Goes West, and his game-writing, The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay, and Dead to Rights, as well as a non-fiction book written with John Zuur Platten, The Ultimate Guide to Video Game Writing and Design . more…

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