VFW

    VFW
    2019

    Synopsis

    A typical night for veterans at a VFW turns into an all-out battle for survival when a desperate teen runs into the bar with a bag of stolen drugs. When a gang of violent punks come looking for her, the vets use every weapon at their disposal to protect the girl and themselves from an unrelenting attack.

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    Cast

    • Stephen LangFred
    • Martin KoveLou Clayton
    • William SadlerWalter Reed
    • David Patrick KellyDoug McCarthy
    • Dora MadisonGutter
    • Sierra McCormickLizard
    • George WendtThomas Zabriski
    • Fred WilliamsonAbe Hawkins
    • Tom WilliamsonShawn Mason
    • Travis HammerBoz

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Film Threat

      When you get old and crotchety, you say things like, “They don’t make ’em like that anymore.” For the most part, “they” don’t. Then you see VFW and realize it’s not a nostalgia thing. It’s genuinely not done this way anymore. Thank you Joe Begos for reminding us how it should be.
    • 83

      Consequence

      VFW delivers the goods—tough-guy dialogue, memorable characters, and so much splatter— and audiences will be giddy as adolescents as the gore literally explodes on screen.
    • 78

      Austin Chronicle

      An unrelenting throwback to a gleefully caustic view of America's capacity for untrammeled nastiness.
    • 75

      The A.V. Club

      Soaked in neon and coated with a thick layer of 16mm film grain, it’s a visceral throwback to the gritty action fare that lined video store shelves in the early ’80s as grindhouses gave way to the VHS boom—coincidentally, also the era that made VFW’s core cast famous.
    • 75

      The Film Stage

      McArdle and Brallier have thus rendered VFW an efficient us versus them scenario with Fred’s crew possessing an infectious, three-dimensional rapport opposite Boz and cronies leaning into their one-track yearning for a fix. Begos then brings the grainy and gritty aesthetic its predecessors possessed to really deliver a throwback vibe augmented solely by new advancements in violently realistic gore.
    • 70

      Slashfilm

      If you’re into “Splatterhouse Cinema” that respects its elders and tenderizes human bodies without remorse, Joe Begos has a pile of discarded corpses waiting for you. It’s vile, slick with repugnance, and appropriately inhumane. A canon full of guts blasted straight into your face – the Fangoria way.
    • 70

      The New York Times

      Essentially a geezers-fight-back siege movie (Tom Williamson plays the sole young veteran), VFW is riotously scuzzy and warmly partial to its rusty heroes.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      VFW ultimately lacks the cinematic flair to be truly memorable. But the pic succeeds on its own terms of being a nostalgic throwback to the days when such B-movies routinely opened on double and triple bills in urban grindhouses.