Sorority Row
Rated R for violence, language, and some brief nudity and suggestions of sexual content.
When a prank goes wrong, a group of sorority sisters spend their senior year with a deadly secret. The night of their graduation, their secret comes back to haunt them.
Is that cheesy, or what?
Well, Sorority Row is more or less your typical dead-teenager movie, even though the "teenagers" in this case are almost all over the age of 20. One bloody death after another, some even amusing and inventive.
Briana Evigan (Step Up 2: The Streets, "Fear Itself: New Year's Day") is great as Cassie, the main character reluctantly pulled into the cover-up by her sorority sisters, and Carrie Fisher (Star Wars) comes in as the surprisingly bad-ass house mother.
In the end, I was actually surprised, which is unusual for for these "Who's killing everyone?" movies, but it's not an intelligent piece of high cinema. If, like me, you enjoy bloody justice dispensed to some highly unlikeable sorority archetypes, then you should have fun with this one.
When a prank goes wrong, a group of sorority sisters spend their senior year with a deadly secret. The night of their graduation, their secret comes back to haunt them.
Is that cheesy, or what?
Well, Sorority Row is more or less your typical dead-teenager movie, even though the "teenagers" in this case are almost all over the age of 20. One bloody death after another, some even amusing and inventive.
Briana Evigan (Step Up 2: The Streets, "Fear Itself: New Year's Day") is great as Cassie, the main character reluctantly pulled into the cover-up by her sorority sisters, and Carrie Fisher (Star Wars) comes in as the surprisingly bad-ass house mother.
In the end, I was actually surprised, which is unusual for for these "Who's killing everyone?" movies, but it's not an intelligent piece of high cinema. If, like me, you enjoy bloody justice dispensed to some highly unlikeable sorority archetypes, then you should have fun with this one.






