Joe-related-complete with a showdown between a willing Joe coalition and a shadow organization smothered in Cobra logos-is similarly slapdash. Snake's eventual collision with all things G.I. When the dice landed on a pair of ones, that was apparently reason enough to kill said dad.) Advertisement (Also, his nickname is "Snake Eyes" because the man who killed his dad rolled some dice before doing so. wander from town to town in search of fight clubs, where he beats the crap out of strangers, collects a paycheck, and hits the road. This sends the adult version of Snake on a path to. This time, Snake watches his father get murdered by a mysterious assassin, which we see play out in dark, serious staging. Snake Eyes opens with something resembling a backstory for Snake Eyes, a man who never knew his given name, and it's a sharp pivot from whatever you remember from the G.I. And the British-born Golding pops in and out of his native accent roughly once every four minutes, despite playing a native-born American.Every argument in the brooding brother-and-sister conflict includes million-dollar glares and bombastic declarations about trust and loyalty-usually repeated a few times in case we don't catch the foreshadowing that someone is, like, totally about to be betrayed.
Unfortunately for the passengers aboard, they are now trapped, soon to be victims of these flesh-eating vipers…Īccording to co-producer David Rimawi, The Asylum initially had no intention of making the film, but they proceeded when an earlier film project fell through. With only hours to live, she jumps aboard a train headed for Los Angeles. Her only chance of survival is a powerful Shaman who lives across the border. Under a powerful zombie curse, a young woman is being slowly devoured from within by snakes that have hatched inside her.