In The Final Girls (2015), not to be confused with Final Girl (2015), actress Amanda and her daughter Max are driving home from an audition that she bombed. She complains that she is typecast as a "scream queen" due to a role in the famous psycho-slasher movie, Camp Bloodbath, back in the 1980s. She was the Final Girl, the one who didn't have sex, and therefore got to live.
Remember, Max is still mourning her mother. Why go to a movie where a psycho-slasher is trying to kill a younger version of her? But she goes. Otherwise be lousy story.
Suddenly, zap! They are trapped in the movie...and the psycho-slasher is stalking them, too! They have to use their wits and knowledge of the genre to defeat him.
The first character they meet is Kurt (Adam Devine), an obnoxious jock with the inflated ego and braggadochio of Adam's usual characters, but much more mean-spirited. He is also apparently bisexual -- he hits on boys and girls both, and thinks that gays "have a cool lifestyle." Interestingly, instead of a homophobic slur, he tells Chris to "suck a turd."
Like most psycho-slashers in the movies of the 1980s, Billy (Daniel Norris) targets teenagers having sex, so so when Kurt strips down to his bulge while his girlfriend waits in the next room, Chris the Love Interest rushes in to distract him. Try showing him your dick -- oh, wait, the killer is attracted to gay sex, too.
The other queer character is Blake (Tory N. Thompson), who also black. You know what happens to the black guy in psycho-slasher movies, right? Gulp!
Next the visitors from our universe try warning the characters about the psycho-slasher. Remember, Max is interacting with the movie version of her own mother, so she'd rather not see her skewered.
The plan backfires: everyone runs away screaming.
Kurt and his girlfriend try to drive away, but they hit a totem pole and die (Kurt is pretzeled). But in the original movie, they survived! The intruders have tampered with the plot, and now all the rules are off. No one will survive.
Well, some survive. You'll have to watch the movie to find out who.
Beefcake: Quite a lot of Adam.
Heterosexism: No one actually has sex, for obvious reasons. Some girl boobs.
Queer Characters: Kurt and Blake, through queer codes instead of self-identification. But this is supposed to be the 1980s, when you were lucky to get that much representation. Writers M.A. Fortin and Joshua John Miller are a gay couple, and speaking to their own experiences as horror fans.
My grade: A-