Available on Prime Attack of the Tattie-Bogle. Available on Prime Mercy Christmas. Available on Prime Black Creek.
Listen to Revenge now.
Available on Prime Lurking Woods. Available on Prime Foxtrap. Available on Prime 60 Seconds to Die. Available on Prime Brokedown. Available on Prime Hell Mountain. Share your thoughts with other customers. Write a customer review. Showing of 16 reviews. Top Reviews Most recent Top Reviews.
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later. Prime Video Verified Purchase. I liked the first one bc was supernatural but the second 2 were more for slasher fans. The in between black and whites I was not into either. Cant say it was bad, just mostly not my style..
Get one month’s free unlimited access
I dont know if it was still part of the 2nd one or if it was the 3rd one. I just don't like people getting sliced up by sociopaths. One person found this helpful. This is a strange anthology consisting of 3 stories, in between the stories there are old movie previews for films like Devil Bat Driller Killer etc. I thought the stories we're good the only downfall was the gore effects were cheap.
Of course the budget was extremely low so that's why the effects weren't realistic.
Regardless, I still enjoyed it in it's totallity! They did find a way to connect the stories,even if just very simply. I recommend a watch if you're a Prime member. This movie has a laggy video. Not sure if that was the intention but I could not watch past 10 minutes. I played other movies to make sure it was not my computer and it was not. Takes you back a bit. Campfire Pictures never fails to come through with the terror.
theranchhands.com: Watch Terror! Death!! Revenge!!! | Prime Video
Great job for an independent film! Not scary or particularly well made. I guess if you like cheesy horror you might enjoy this. I understand that it's an indie.
- Facebook Blocks Yair Netanyahu After Calls For Revenge – The Forward!
- Human Nature?
- Accessibility Links?
- Earthquake Weather.
- War on terror: Al Qaeda issues new manifesto of revenge | The Sunday Times;
- Modern School for Mallet-Keyboard Instruments: Includes Classic Morris Goldenberg Etudes.
- .
But I've seen well written, well acted, and well directed indies. This isn't one of them. See all 16 reviews. Get to Know Us. Immediately after the September 11 terrorist attacks I was depressed by the chest-pounding jingoism, racism, mob mentality and demands for revenge that gripped the American public. Given the alarming lack of dissent and critical thinking exhibited by the mainstream U.
This essay views the terrorist attacks as part of an ongoing war between the U. It makes a plea for restraint when responding to the attacks, fearing our indiscriminate slaughter of civilians may result in more desperate warriors thirsting for revenge of their own as the cycle of violence intensifies. On September 11 the world came crashing down on the United States of America. The horrific attacks against the World Trade Center and Pentagon produced an agonizing grief that consumed the nation for days after the strike.
Hour after hour, Americans watched in stunned disbelief as the TV networks presented in excruciating detail the heartbreaking stories of those who had lost loved ones in the disaster, while somber administration spokespeople decried the "evil enemies of freedom" and promised revenge.
All this created a national atmosphere where people were justifiably sad, frightened and angry. Yet while the media did a good job of depicting the carnage and reflecting and creating the hysteria, it is doing a poor job explaining the bigger picture. The "Attack on America! It was merely an escalation in a war that had been raging for some time. Perhaps we did not recognize it as a war because, for the most part, it was the "enemy" that was taking most of the casualties.
The Muslim world has been under attack by the U.
- War on terror: Al Qaeda issues new manifesto of revenge.
- How to Make Soap!
- Dead Letter Day (Rebecca Angell Book 1);
- The Bicycle.
- This is True [v4]: Artificial Intelligence Like Real Thing (And 500 Other Bizarre-but-True Stories and Headlines from the Worlds Press)!
We shot down Libyan planes in , bombed Beirut in and , and attacked Libya again in In we sank an Iranian ship, and shot down one of their passenger planes in In we shot down more Libyan planes. During the Gulf War, well over , civilians were killed as we targeted our bombs on Iraq's "infrastructure," and the sanctions and frequent military attacks continue to kill Iraqis and destroy the country's society.
In we bombed Sudan and Afghanistan. The death and destruction that resulted from these actions were not reported by the U. There were no touching vignettes of the victim's lives, no interviews with grieving families, no close ups of tear-streaked faces contorted with anguish. The "invisible" consequences of our military adventures perhaps explain the surprise and indignation many Americans expressed at the September 11th attacks.
So, not surprisingly, our assets have been targets of some counterattacks in the ongoing war. In , a truck bomb killed marines in Beirut. In , a Pan Am passenger plane was brought down by explosives placed onboard by Libyans. Our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania were blown up in Last year the U. Lets face it—maintaining our comfortable standard of living requires maintaining control over strategic areas of the globe.
With over sixty major military bases and hundreds of smaller installations scattered around the world, the U. As an empire, we must expect resistance from people whose natural resources we wish to exploit, whose governments we try to subvert, and whose cultures we continue to corrupt. Whether it takes the form of protests, sabotage or terrorism, you can count on this: Terrorism can never be stopped. Until that time when everyone in the world has a chip implanted in their heads and is controlled and monitored by a central government computer, there will be those who will be able to express their anger and frustration through violence.
Our society is extremely vulnerable. It always has been, and will remain so despite the draconian "safety" measures the government surely has in store for us.
16 customer reviews
A good way to fight terrorism would be to eliminate some of the policies that cause so much resentment in the Muslim world. It would help if the U. In short, we could start acting like we were a part of the global community, rather than arrogant, omnipotent rulers over it.