
Veneciafrenia

When a group of young Spanish tourists travel to Venice for a bachelorette party, they are met by angry locals who are not keen on foreigners and soon they find themselves fighting for their lives.
When a group of young Spanish tourists travel to Venice for a bachelorette party, they are met by angry locals who are not keen on foreigners and soon they find themselves fighting for their lives.
I wanted to like it a lot more than I actually did. I this is one of those movies where the trailer was 1000 times more interesting and exciting than the film actually was. Save your money and just watch the trailer!
[Prime Video] If Nicolas Roeg captured the darkness of Venice in "Don't look up" (1973), Álex de la Iglesia tries the same without success, closer to the giallo. It's an empty tribute, despite the admirable irony of the murders, not in dark alleys but in daylight, in front of tourists abducted by their cell phones. The result is boring and discursive, so obvious about gentrification that it's almost insulting.
Very bad, as bad as it is, it seemed very long and it is short in duration
I wanted to like it a lot more than I actually did. I this is one of those movies where the trailer was 1000 times more interesting and exciting than the film actually was. Save your money and just watch the trailer!