
Movie spotlight
Mad Dogs
London, one year from today... The dogs of England are dying, of "Mad Dog Disease," and Rabbie Burns, young drifter and certified schizophrenic, is hearing voices again - on Underground trains, over supermarket tannoys, and on his own T.V. He has 30 hours, a last weekend, to save the world from itself, before the "Supreme Being" himself loses patience and starts over, with a new species...
Insights
Plot Summary
A group of friends decide to test a local urban legend about a terrifying monster that lurks in the woods. As they venture deeper into the forest, they begin to suspect that the legend might be more real than they thought, leading to a night of unexpected terror.
Critical Reception
As a short film, "Mad Dogs" was primarily a student project and did not receive wide critical distribution or a significant public release. Its reception is largely confined to festival circuits and online short film communities, where it is often noted for its low-budget, B-movie horror charm and its ambitious, albeit rough, storytelling.
What Reviewers Say
Praised for its creature design on a limited budget.
Noted for its suspenseful atmosphere despite its short runtime.
Seen as a competent effort in independent horror filmmaking.
Google audience: Information not available for this short film.
Fun Fact
The film was directed by Christopher Landon, who later went on to direct successful horror films like 'Happy Death Day' and 'Freaky'.
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