Bad Kids Go to Hell

Bad Kids Go to Hell

Movie poster
Directed by Matthew Spradlin
Produced by Barry Wernick
Brad Keller
Written by Matthew Spradlin
Barry Wernick
Starring Amanda Alch
Marc Donato
Augie Duke
Roger Edwards
Ali Faulkner
Cameron Deane Stewart
Ben Browder
Judd Nelson
Music by Brian Flores
Cinematography David H. Blood
Edited by Justin Wilson
Production
company
BKGTH Productions
Bad Kids
Spiderwood Studios
Distributed by Eagle Films
Phase 4 Films
Red Sea Media
Film1
One2See Films
Top Film
Umbrella Entertainment
Apex
Kino Swiat
Roarlion SDN
Sahamongkolfilm Co.
VTI
Campaolo
Release dates
  • December 7, 2012 (2012-12-07) (United States and Canada)
Running time
92 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Bad Kids Go to Hell is a 2012 dark comedy thriller film directed by Matthew Spradlin, who co-wrote it with Barry Wernick. Based on Spradlin and Wernick's best-selling graphic novel of the same name, the film stars Amanda Alch, Marc Donato, Augie Duke, Roger Edwards, Ali Faulkner, and Cameron Deane Stewart as six prep school students, who serve detention in a seemingly haunted school library.[1] It had a limited theatrical release on October 27, 2012. On December 7, 2012, it was released nationwide. The film was also screened at various public destinations across the U.S.[2]

Plot

A SWAT team barges into a school library to find a student holding an axe and surrounded by savaged bodies, before the film goes back eight hours previously. Six unruly prep school students are forced to serve Saturday detention for eight hours at Crestview Academy, where psychologist Dr. Day (Jeffrey Schmidt) conducts psychological testing on the students to examine their personalities and trigger their demeanors, recording each session in the process. Despite receiving an expulsion notice from Headmaster Nash (Judd Nelson), a new low-income student Matt Clark (Cameron Deane Stewart) plans to compensate for his poor behavior by joining the awkward Tarek Ahmed (Marc Donato), the jock Craig Cook (Roger Edwards), the sly Goth girl Veronica Harmon (Augie Duke), the prissy and asthmatic Megan McDurst (Amanda Alch), and the popular girl Tricia Wilkes (Ali Faulkner) in detention.

After giving them the task to complete a school history assignment, Dr. Day restricts their internet reach and takes away many of their phones, leaving the students imprisoned alone in the library, remodeled by the janitor, Max (Ben Browder), with Native American portraits and an Apache statue. The students believe the library is haunted. They realize they have mutually dysfunctional family lives, though they have their differences with each other, sparked from prior encounters which have been recorded on camera. They all try to break out of the library, but they are sealed in. Behaving mischievous, Veronica hides Megan’s inhaler and frames Tarek, leading to Megan having a shortness of breath and dying before it’s found.

Getting the intranet (no Internet is available) to work, Veronica does her research. They discover an old, deceased Indian, Jacob Rainwater, once owned land that was stolen from the Apache tribe in the 1870s by General Andrew Winston Clarke, before it was taken over by the city of Crestview to build the school. As the students argue on-and-off, they discover a vent that allows them to navigate to different rooms that are locked. Thereby, they learn Matt has an undisclosed criminal background and become suspicious of him. After Tarek goes missing and they return to the library through the vent, they discover Tricia’s powerful mother is the Governor, Craig’s father is a city councilman, and Megan's father co-owns the property of which Tarek’s father is responsible for building the library, all of whom made an agreement with the school to ensure their spoiled kids would be guaranteed to graduate in exchange for the construction of the library.

A dark storm rages on outside the school, tampering with the lights and electronics inside, increasing the students’ fear of the paranormal. In an accident, Craig falls down the steps in the library and is staked by one of his crutches, dying instantly. Not long after, Tricia admits her mother was the reason why Jacob lost his house, and Veronica secures evidence on Craig’s camera showing that Tricia, Craig, Megan and Tarek had killed Jacob at his home to vacate the ownership of the property, leaving no next of kin to take over. Deeply believing in the paranormal, they attempt to contact Jacob’s spirit so that Tricia can call a truce, but the spirit rebels and seemingly harms Veronica. The spirit then appears, and she uses a nail gun to commit suicide due to fright.

Shortly after, Dr. Day emerges to reveal his alliance with Veronica. The whole time, they masterminded everyone's paranormal delusions and emotional outbursts, triggered by psychological tests (inkblots), all to sell the story and make money. Killed by Dr. Day for trying to escape through the vent, Tarek's dead body is what was used as the ghost. Before Veronica can shoot Matt using the nail gun, Dr. Day abruptly kills her with an axe for poisoning him and causing his diarrhea earlier. Matt is framed for all the murders, as an unexpected booby trap involving the statue severs Dr. Day's head, killing him. A SWAT team barges in to find Matt armed with an axe in the middle of the carnage. Matt is subdued, placed in a straitjacket and gagged. Max arrives, revealing his Apache ancestor, Jacob Rainwater, owned the house where the school now stands, which at one time was also taken by General Clark and his army over a century ago. In the closing credits, Matt is driven away in an ambulance and Tricia's Governor mother, Tarek’s father and Craig’s father pay off Max in order to clear them of any involvement in the incident.[3]

Cast

Sequel

A sequel originally titled Bad Kids Go 2 Hell,[4] now called Bad Kids of Crestview Academy, was set to be released in 2016, and will be released in theaters on January 13, 2017.[5] The sequel will have returning cast members like Cameron Deane Stewart, and Ben Browder, along with new cast members like Drake Bell and Sammi Hanratty. Although Judd Nelson will be replaced by Sean Astin as Headmaster Nash.[6]

References

  1. Nix (2011-11-01). "Bad Kids Go to Hell ... and Get Their Own Teaser Trailer". BeyondHollywood.com. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
  2. The Woman In Black (2012-10-05). "New Stills, Poster, and Screening Info for Bad Kids Go to Hell". DreadCentral.com. Retrieved 2012-10-05.
  3. "Bad Kids Go to Hell". Retrieved 2012-12-05.
  4. "Bad Kids Go to Hell again. Sequel to be released in 2015.". Horror Society. Retrieved December 19, 2015.
  5. http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/199972/bad-kids-crestview-academy-going-back-school/
  6. "Bad Kids of Crestview Academy (2016)". IMDb. Retrieved December 19, 2015.

External links

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