Chirphymium
It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
WillSushyMedia
This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.
Phillipa
Strong acting helps the film overcome an uncertain premise and create characters that hold our attention absolutely.
Allissa
.Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
nknicholask
Neil Breen makes some of the most entertaining films I have ever had the pleasure to watch. Thank you Neil.
Robert MacKie
Neil Breen is an alien being from another galaxy, who has come to Earth to spread his message....that's not the plot of this movie, that's just who he is. I have no idea what the plot of this movie is. Breen's character in this film is a hacker/assassin/bioterrorist who discovers a mysterious old man who gives him a magical rock that cures cancer, which he uses once on a girl we don't know and then it never comes up again. Also his wife is dead. Or a ghost. Or a skost. And there's anthrax. And lots of stock footage.I also don't know what Neil Breen's message is. Is he here to save us? Or destroy us? I'm not sure, but he IS here, and you MUST see this movie.
MisterWhiplash
I saw a segment from the web-show 'Best of the Worst' which featured clips from this... do we call it a 'film'(?) It made me intrigued by just how insane the actor-writer-producer-director (also caterer-production manager-designer-music-score etc etc) Neil Breen made this tone poem about a man who becomes a sort of weapon against the world while also having the super-human ability to heal people with brain cancer and yet spends all of his time in the desert, living off of tuna fish cans and his several laptops where he organizes his plans to dominate and possibly blow up the world but hey it's okay because he "supports the troops" and mourns for his dead wife which... how did she die again?! This movie is utter, incomprehensible nonsense of a magnificent order. You can't believe what is before your eyes exists, but apparently through the sheer will-power of ego and drive, one man can make a movie by himself basically single-handedly - well, also, a lot, and I mean a LOT, of stock footage helps. Not to say the other actors (are they actors) help much (they don't), or any sense of forward momentum or drive. It almost appears like it's some sort of desperate plea in the guise of an espionage thriller narrative (hell, even on the front cover of the DVD the quote says "Stunning... desperation..." as if the critic, if it was one, was marking this as a cry for help).At the same time as an ego-trip spectacle of the worst order, it may be more unwatchable than The Room; at least in the case of Tommy Wiseau, he had a certain oddball, off-the-wall charm and deranged charisma (or just bafflement) that could keep your eyes glued. What makes Neil Breen such a train-wreck to watch is more-so the filmmaking, how it is apparently shot on film in 2005 but he and everything else looks like it was shot in the early 80's, and is over-loaded with a gargantuan amount of narration, and at times one wonders if this Neil Breen whoever has telekinetic capabilities with those he acts across on screen since he talks and we hear it without him moving his mouth (!)It's not a sight to recommend legitimately in any way shape or form - matter of fact it's one of the ten worst things ever committed to celluloid, like you halfway expect for the Beast at Yucca Flats to arrive - but if you decide to watch it with friends, it will be one of the great bonding experiences of your lives. Watching Double Down is like going through the trenches with an A-grade certified psycho who is full of himself and tuna and the electronic impulses giving him a heartbeat for some reason.
widdaugh-1
What to say about this movie, nothing really. After watching this I was confused and wondered exactly what the heck I had just seen, and if I had actually watched a movie or just some scenes hastily spliced together. The plot is lack luster, the acting is subpar, and the continuity of the story is simply not there. Changing from one scene to the next with barely, if any continuity. The video quality was below what would be expected even for an independent film. It is apparent that this movie was written as nothing more than an ego-stroking for the write/director/star.I am sure that Neil Breen had a story in mind at the beginning but somewhere between what he had envisioned to the final product that idea took a turn for the worse. Leaving us with a hollow, unfilled piece of cinematic nothingness.