A group of patrons in a bar fight for their lives against multiplying monsters, while one of their own is slowly being taken over by monster slime, resulting in only three survivors. Feast is a 2005 American English-language Action Comedy film featuring Balthazar Getty, Navi Rawat, Henry Rollins, Judah Friedlander, Josh Zuckerman, Jenny Wade and Somah Haaland. Feast was Produced by Michael Leahy, Joel Soisson, Larry Tanz and Andrew Jameson. Feast is written by Marcus Dunstan and Patrick Melton and it is directed by John Gulager. Dimension Films acquired the distribution rights for the film. Feast was released on 18th January 2007 and takes a screen time of 87 minutes. Feast was made on a budget of $3 million and at the box office it grossed only $0 million. Cinematography was done by Thomas L. Callaway and editing by Kirk M. Morri. The music was composed by Stephen Edwards.
Discover where to stream Feast full movie in
HD. Watch Feast online in HD with subtitles other
streaming sources. Find out where to stream the best movies and series with Flixjini. On
Signing up with Flixjini you get our personalized recommendations of movies and TV shows
that match your mood and taste. Stay tuned to Flixjini for more updates and relevant
information on happening movies and TV shows.
Feast Reviews and Ratings
Average Review Rating : positive
Positive Review Rating : 52%
Scott Brown
Feast isnt quite demented enough to reach Raimi an heights, but Gulager uses parts of the monster movie buffalo even the buffalo didnt know existed. ( Read More )
Peter Schom
Its too bad it didnt get a proper theatrical run because Feast is a B movie blast of hyperkinetic monster movie madness. ( Read More )
Peter Hartlaub
Feast isnt a straight to video horror movie, but thats only a technicality. ( Read More )
James Berardinelli
In trying to be hip and funny, Gulager proves that theres a fine line between parody and stupidity. ( Read More )
Maitland McDonagh
Repetitive and edited in a stuttering, lightning fast style that makes it impossible to see who or what is doing what to what or whom, John Gulagers directing debut is horror at its most reductive and least resonant. ( Read More )