Black Sheep

There are over 40 million sheep in New Zealand, and they're pissed off!

5.8
20061h 26m

Production

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After a childhood prank by his brother Angus causes Henry to develop a phobia of sheep, he must step up to the onslaught of a genetically-mutated man-eating flock with the help of his friend and a young environmentalist.

Available For Free On

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Cast

Photo of Nathan Meister

Nathan Meister

Henry Oldfield

Photo of Peter Feeney

Peter Feeney

Angus Oldfield

Photo of Danielle Mason

Danielle Mason

Experience

Photo of Tandi Wright

Tandi Wright

Dr. Rush

Photo of Min Windle

Min Windle

Investor

Photo of Nick Blake

Nick Blake

Taxi Driver

Photo of Matthew Chamberlain

Matthew Chamberlain

Oliver Oldfield

Photo of Kevin McTurk

Kevin McTurk

Weresheep

Photo of Luke Hawker

Luke Hawker

Investor

Photo of Tim Wong

Tim Wong

Investor

Photo of Jonathan King

Jonathan King

Man pulled down by sheep

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

Ovinaphobia in Wairarapa!

Black Sheep, written and directed by Jonathan King is a wonderfully kooky horror comedy filmed out of New Zealand. Premise is simple, genetic tampering by unstable farmer man-child type has produced psychotic zombie sheep who like to chow down on human flesh. If you are "lucky" to still be alive after being bitten, you turn into a human/sheep hybrid - who likes to chow down on human flesh! All inhabitants of this island are doomed unless three spunky young heroes in waiting can overcome monumental odds and save the day!

With effects done by Weta being no bad thing, Black Sheep is a whole bunch of popcorn munching fun. Many of the jokes aren't really surprising but they hit the mark because the comedy is drawn nice and broad. It helps as well that much of it carries a sense of mischievous depravity about it, while the snarky asides to scientists and tree hugging environmentalists shows King to have a semblance of world awareness about him. The cinematography (Richard Bluck) is gorgeous, capturing the magnificent landscapes as a backdrop to the ovine carnage, and Victoria Kelly's musical score is jovial supreme.

Nothing earth shattering here, so those horror/comedy fans who venture in for the first time expecting otherwise will be disappointed. However, at under 90 minutes in length King's movie never once sags in pace or gasp for new comedic air. It's a short sharp shocker of a rib tickler and well worthy of a look if in the requisite mood. 7/10

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