In a mining mine in the Harmony region, that dramatic and terrifying story takes place. That story began when that mine collapsed because of the son of the owner Tom Hanniger. Six miners were buried alive, and only the rescue team found Harry Warden alive. The other miners were killed by Harry to save himself oxygenously. After a short time, Harry awakes from his coma at the local hospital and kills 22 people. Harry Warden may have come back, seeking revenge from those who have escaped death in the past in complete absence of reason and logic.
The trouble is that after that first gouged eyeball, there's not a whole lot further to go. Novelty value being a rapidly diminishing thing, the technology demands an escalation in intensity and inventiveness that the movie doesn't deliver.
My Bloody Valentine 3D is as cheap, tacky and throwaway as the plastic glasses that come with it, but for a good old-fashioned Friday night at the movies, it's damn near unbeatable.
My Bloody Valentine may not be horribly acted, but in a post-Scream and post-Scary Movie era, it's difficult to squeeze any more blood from this low-brow/high-camp turnip.
A strange synergy of old and new, My Bloody Valentine 3D blends cutting-edge technology and old-school prosthetics to produce something both familiar and alien: gore you can believe in.
Los Angeles Times
January 20, 2009
In some ways, the filmmakers have created something too authentic in spirit to the original film, as it also fairly quickly becomes a plodding chore to watch.
The outrageous amounts of blood 'n' guts directed toward the audience in three-dimensional spatters still make this substandard flick a gorehound's wet dream.