Teeth – Wer zuletzt beißt, beißt am besten (2007)
61KTeeth – Wer zuletzt beißt, beißt am besten: Directed by Mitchell Lichtenstein. With Jess Weixler, John Hensley, Josh Pais, Hale Appleman. Still a stranger to her own body, a high school student discovers she has a physical advantage when she becomes the object of male violence.
“If all you know about u0026#39;Teethu0026#39; is the premise, you probably think itu0026#39;s a typical B horror film. In fact, this movie is very good and very fun. I donu0026#39;t mean so-bad-itu0026#39;s-good, I mean good.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe key is that the movie is restrained. You get the shots that will make you cringe–the filmmakers donu0026#39;t skimp on the juicy stuff–but nothing outrageous. More importantly, u0026#39;Teethu0026#39; is well acted and written. In some indie films, the dialogue is so bad itu0026#39;s distracting. Not this one. In fact, movies in this genre can go overboard at almost any point–a rogue scientist arriving to explain everything, buckets of blood, or just a scene that goes too far and makes you laugh instead of scream. u0026#39;Teethu0026#39; deftly avoids the pitfalls. It is scary, funny, and never too much, at least not for me.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis movie isnu0026#39;t an Oscar-worthy drama, but it could be a cult classic. I, for one, left the theatre with my moneyu0026#39;s worth and then some.”