Death to the Supermodels | |
Director: | Joel Silverman |
Producer: | Juan Feldman |
Starring: | Jaime Pressly Brooke Burns Taylor Negron Matt Winston Diane Delano Sung Hi Lee Jason Acuña |
Music: | Jawara Fred Wilson |
Cinematography: | William MacCollum |
Editing: | Michael Alberts |
Distributor: | MGM Home Entertainment |
Runtime: | 84 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Death to the Supermodels is a 2005 thriller comedy starring Jaime Pressly, Brooke Burns, Kimberley Davies, Taylor Negron, Matt Winston, Diane Delano and Jason Acuña. It was written and directed by Joel Silverman and filmed in Costa Rica.[1]
Tiffany Courtney is an overly perky editor working for Merle Magazine. To give her company's magazine a more legitimate readership (the main readers of the magazine are currently prisoners, transsexuals, priests and gays), Tiffany proposes to her boss that the magazine hold a swimwear shoot on a tropical island starring the world's top five greatest supermodels.
To take the pictures Tiffany recruits Gunter and Gerd, two asexual photographers from Germany. The supermodels all agree to participate and are flown to the Islands of Isis, a tropical paradise where the shoot is to take place. Things don't start off well for Tiffany. As well as showing hatred towards each other the supermodels are instantly put off by Tiffany's excessive perkiness. Things go from bad to worse for Tiffany when she starts hearing the voice of Ryan from her self-help tapes in her head telling her to murder the supermodels.
Once Tiffany starts hearing the voices a Ninja begins to murder the supermodels. P is shot in the back by a spear gun during a shoot. Hoo-Chi has her neck broken whilst in hand-to-hand combat with the Ninja (following her death Hoo-Chi is revealed to be a transsexual, has male genitalia and appears as a man on a Chinese passport). Despite the murders Tiffany is determined to go ahead with the shoot. The next to be killed is Yo who dies of a massive bout of flatulence after the Ninja tampered with steroid suppositories she was taking to maintain her large behind. The voices in Tiffany's head continue to tell her that she had killed them and suspicion falls on Tiffany from the remaining models.
On the final day of the shoot, Eva's failed attempts to seduce the asexual photographers results in her abandoning the shoot. She is later found shot along with Gunter. The Ninja confronts Tiffany and Gerd and is unmasked and is Tiffany's boss Merle. Darbie is revealed to be Merle's lesbian lover. Merle and Darbie (whose real name is revealed to be Sarah) had conspired to kill the supermodels to promote the image of a new, intelligent supermodel. Gerd was also in on the scheme to escape from the dominance the mute Gunter to which he is basically a translator. Merle reveals that Tiffany is a major pawn in her scheme. The voices in her head were part of a scheme involving micro transmitters inserted in Tiffany's ears whilst she was having surgery to remove a freckle on her left nipple which Tiffany was concerned would turn cancerous. The voices are provided by Ryan himself who is another associate of Merle. He is also Dieter, Eva's poolboy. Merle turns the gun on Tiffany, she tries to talk them out of killing anyone else but is shot dead to set her up as the killer. The movie ends with Merle and Sarah/Darbie on the beach, talking about the future, but Merle is then shot (presumably with fatal consequences) by Sarah/Darbie presumably so only she would control the new wave of models.
The film features actresses with experience as models. Jaime Pressley and Brooke Burns both have modeling backgrounds. Eva Derrek is a former Miss Germany with extensive experience as a fashion and fitness model (and incidentally a former flight attendant for a German airline). She plays a French model in the film.
Scott Weinberg of DVDTalk.com described the film as "One of the stupidest, sloppiest, skankiest, and most amazingly unfunny comedies I've ever seen."[4]
Catriona Mathewson of the Courier Mail gave it one star writing "WE HAVE a new contender for the worst movie ever made".
Impulse Gamer gave it a rating of 7.9 while saying, "It's cheese, it's camp, it's really a bad movie but somehow manages to pull itself together for an almost decent laugh."[5]