Director: Steven Nesbit
Release date: 2025
Contains spoilers
I was torn over this, at first I was going to look at this film as an Honourable Mention with the vampire (TK Howard) as a fleeting visitation. But whilst the screentime is low it is central to the plot (such as there is one) and appears prominently on the movie poster.
The film follows a paranormal investigation TV crew. They consist of Wallace (Steven Nesbit), a man so out of touch with reality that he can’t work out pre-recorded call-ins for their podcast and thinks they’re live on air, Poppy (Jennifer Bryer), the sceptic, behavioural scientist and doing a thesis on paranormal investigators, and Chet (Michael Flores), cameraman. Wallace and Chet hate each other, not helped by Chet spoiling shots by walking on camera with food.
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| the vampire |
Chet does, however, find them a paying gig in a warehouse and so manager Morris (Morris Featherstone) gets them a producer in the form of superfan Snow (Kristina E. Howard). Unfortunately, Chet has an ulterior motive, he is being forced to investigate the warehouse by psycho Ethel (Marilee Ensign) who wants them to find the stashed Irish Crown Jewels. This is where the vampire comes into it. Chet starts seeing an animated mouse (David Ralph) and the vampire, guardians of the jewels who are willing to hand them over for the price of his soul. At first it seems that the mouse and vampire are hallucinations but it becomes apparent they’re real.
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| Steven Nesbit as Wallace |
That’s the story, such as it is. There is them being interviewed and so each time they speak to camera they get a new title on screen – which they are aware of as it is filmed in a 4th wall kind of way. The whole humour thread, to be honest, didn’t overly work for me – fart and wee gags and Wallace in a range of unaware to just plain daft. It felt the sort of thing that you could put in a sitcom and, repetition of the humour would eventually warm on the audience and catchphrases would evolve, but in a feature the humour missed more than hit. And the humour was all it really had, the plot was flimsy and the situation repetitive. Standout, positively, was Jennifer Bryer whose tone was spot on.
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| Jennifer Bryer as Poppy |
There is no lore to relay re the vampire, we get a rubber looking mask, a shadow at one point and one bite. Overall, relying on the humour made this struggle in my eyes – but if the humour appeals and tickles you’ll get more out of it. 3.5 out of 10 for me.
The episode's imdb page is here.
On Demand @ Amazon US
On Demand @ Amazon UK











































