An experimental drug called "Round Two" which revives dead people in combat, irregardless of what they died from, somehow winds up in Canada. While being transported, the truck has a minor accident where a container with a squirt top gets left at the residence of Dan (Dave Montour) a less than sanitary tattoo "artist."
The town has a struggle between the clean cut looking crowd and the tattooed skate boarders who all like to drink at the same pizza place. Pete (Chris Waldick) the owner of the establishment, in a bad plot point, opts to get a tattoo at Dan's, who by now has said drug/chemical which looks like tattoo pigment. The rest you can figure out.
The movie was shot with a fake grainy "grindhouse" on top of the super clear DVD, giving it an unusual, if not ridiculous look. The blood and head rolls were also very fake looking. The film consisted of bad dialogue and a bunch of swearing that would have an eighth grade appeal to it. The movie also introduces some token female characters that don't play a role, other than to be in a film. Gee, guess what that was all about.
Parental guide: Excessive F-bombs, no sex, magazine nudity.
The town has a struggle between the clean cut looking crowd and the tattooed skate boarders who all like to drink at the same pizza place. Pete (Chris Waldick) the owner of the establishment, in a bad plot point, opts to get a tattoo at Dan's, who by now has said drug/chemical which looks like tattoo pigment. The rest you can figure out.
The movie was shot with a fake grainy "grindhouse" on top of the super clear DVD, giving it an unusual, if not ridiculous look. The blood and head rolls were also very fake looking. The film consisted of bad dialogue and a bunch of swearing that would have an eighth grade appeal to it. The movie also introduces some token female characters that don't play a role, other than to be in a film. Gee, guess what that was all about.
Parental guide: Excessive F-bombs, no sex, magazine nudity.