Dying God (also known as Final Spawn) is a 2008 Argentinian–French horror-science fiction film directed by Fabrice Lambot and produced by Jean Pierre Putters of Metaluna Productions France and Uriel Barros of Buenos Aires Rojo Shocking (Argentina)
| Dying God | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Fabrice Lambot |
| Screenplay by | Nicanor Loreti Germán Val Jean Depelley Fabrice Lambot |
| Story by | Fabrice Lambot Uriel Barros |
| Produced by | Jean-Pierre Putters Uriel Barros |
| Starring | James Horan Lance Henriksen |
| Cinematography | José María Gómez |
| Edited by | Guille Gatti |
| Music by | Sup |
| Distributed by | Green Apple |
Release date |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
| Countries | Argentina France |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $500,000[citation needed] |
Sean Fallon, a corrupt cop, attempts to solve a series of unexplainable rapes that have resulted in the brutal deaths of prostitutes. Fallon discovers that the rapes are the work of a creature worshiped as a god by South American tribes. Aided by a local pimp, Fallon attempts to stop the creature while dealing with his own issues.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| James Horan | Sean Fallon |
| Agathe de La Boulaye | Angel |
| Lance Henriksen | Chance |
| Enrique Liporace | Angelo |
| Victoria Maurette | Ingrid |
| Samuel Arena | Duncan |
| Louis Ballester | Nicky |
| Hugo Halbrich | Bennell |
| Iván Espeche | Ray |
| Brad Krupsaw | Gallagher |
| Kevin Schiele | Charlie |
| Mariana Seligmann | Camila |
| Maxime Seugé | Nano |
| Gabriela Cóceres | Steffie |
| Natasha Drivan | Lisa Douglas |
| Nicolás Silvert | Kurupi Monster |
| Luciana Aguirre | 2nd Victim |
| Alejandro Vera | Strong Man |
| Guillermo Jauregui | Cab Driver |
| Silvina Quintanilla | Steffie´s Mother |
| Patricia Juliá | Agonizing Victim |
| Uriel Barros | Bill Jhonson |
| Salvador Sanz | Strip Club Customer |
Green Apple released Dying God on DVD on December 10, 2010.[1]
Scott Foy of Dread Central rated it 1.5/5 stars and called it "a cheap, dull, ugly-looking movie with ugly characters and a monster that remains uninspired despite the unsavory nature of this beast."[2] Adam Arseneau of DVD Verdict criticized the film's premise and execution as being of poor quality.[3] Adrian Halen of HorrorNews.net noted that the film had the look and feel of SyFy Channel original movie, with poor execution, and generic story.[4]
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