The Life Zone | |
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Directed by | Rod Weber |
Written by | Kenneth del Vecchio |
Produced by | Kenneth del Vecchio |
Starring |
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Cinematography |
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Edited by | Rod Weber |
Music by | Kenneth Lampl |
Production company | Justice for All Productions |
Distributed by |
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Release date |
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Running time | 81 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.5 million |
The Life Zone is an anti-abortion horror film written and produced by Kenneth del Vecchio, directed and edited by Rod Weber and starring Robert Loggia, Blanche Baker, Lindsey Haun, Angela Little, and Nina Transfield. It was released as a straight-to-DVD in 2011.
It was panned by critics, with the main criticism on its anti-abortion message, but also focus on bad acting, screenplay, and lack of scares.
Three women who had gone to get abortions wake up to find that they have been kidnapped and are being held captive by a doctor who intends for them to deliver their unwanted babies. Instead of the usual horror fare, the nightgown-garbed women drink warm milk while reading and watching propaganda on why abortion is wrong.
After a while, two of the women decide against having abortions and agree to have their babies, while the third still resists and even tries to force a miscarriage.
Suddenly it transpires that the two women who gave birth were never real; it turns out that the die-harder died on the abortion table and the doctor had committed suicide, and both of them are in Hell.
Fewer than 50 people—including the cast and producers—attended the premiere. When interviewed afterwards, several cast members could not decipher the ending of the film. [1]
Reviews of the film were generally negative: [2] [3] [4] [5]
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