I recommend it for those who like the cast, comedy on the corporate themes or to those who want to see how Patrick Brice underwhelms You after the. Patrick Brice's "Corporate Animals" is one of those comedies that never moves beyond its premise. It starts and ends with a company retreat that goes horribly awry.

Corporate Animals movie reviews & Metacritic score: Lucy (Demi Moore) is the egotistical megalomaniac CEO of Incredible Edibles, America's premier provider o. Read Common Sense Media's Corporate Animals review, age rating, and parents guide. The movie's comedic approach should have lightened the oppressiveness of the grimy, claustrophobic cave setting, but instead it only seems awkwardly at odds with it.

Corporate Animals

The new horror/comedy Corporate Animals touches ever so delicately on the subject of cannibalism. I want to touch on that early in this review if you're touchy on the subject or just a whiny little B, then. Corporate Animals is an absolute chore to sit through. It is easily one of the worst films of the year. Corporate Animals starts off with an intriguing premise. The idea of hapless workers trapped without food is clever.

Trailer Corporate Animals

The breakdown of civility in a desperate situation could have been thoughtfully explored. Sundance Film Review: 'Corporate Animals'. "Corporate Animals" is a character sketch in search of a plot. In the first act, fatuous guide Brandon (Ed Helms) gets the gang trapped in an underground cavern large enough for people to slink off to the bathroom or seduce each other behind a rock.

Movies that appropriately express the rage that can build inside those worker cogs who ensure the larger business machine operates with maximum efficiency but reap no monetary benefits. Corporate Animals fails on all accounts, earning quite the unimpressive performance review. You can see the movie that Corporate Animals wants to be, as there are instances when its wild mixture of satirizing capitalism, horror comedy and peculiar banter create some moments that succeed in being uniquely funny. Review for the film " Corporate Animals".