
Wuchak
_**By-the-numbers slasher is entertaining**_ In the San Francisco area, five girls in 6th Grade reject a boy’s polite offer to dance with one of them falsely accusing him of assaulting her. Thirteen years later, when they’re all about ...


Movie spotlight
Four friends start to receive morbid Valentine cards and realise they are being stalked by someone they had spurned 13 years ago. A masked killer is on the loose and Valentine's day is soon approaching.
Five beautiful young women are targeted by a mysterious masked killer who uses Valentine's Day as his gruesome hunting ground. As the body count rises, the women must uncover the killer's identity before they all become victims of his deadly Valentine's Day massacre. The killer seems to be motivated by a cruel prank inflicted upon him in junior high school.
Valentine was a commercial success, grossing over $36 million worldwide against a $6 million budget. However, it was poorly received by critics, who largely panned its predictable plot, reliance on slasher film tropes, and uninspired direction.
Relies heavily on tired slasher clichés without offering any fresh scares.
The film struggles with a weak script and unconvincing character motivations.
Despite a strong cast, the predictable plot and generic horror elements fail to impress.
Google audience: Audiences found the film to be a forgettable slasher flick, with many criticizing its lack of originality and genuine scares. Some viewers felt it was mildly entertaining as a "so bad it's good" movie, while others were simply disappointed.
The character of Jeremy is played by Daniel Cosgrove, who also starred as Aiden Dennison in the popular soap opera 'All My Children'.
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_**By-the-numbers slasher is entertaining**_ In the San Francisco area, five girls in 6th Grade reject a boy’s polite offer to dance with one of them falsely accusing him of assaulting her. Thirteen years later, when they’re all about ...