

Chill suffers from what many of the films covered in this series suffer from: a serious lack of a Hollywood budget - or really any budget at all.

Unfortunately for these players, it wasn’t just the game that was resurrected it was also the game’s tragic past. He enlists his best friend Kyle (Roger Conners) to help with filming and editing, while Jared assembles a new group of players. Years later, a student named Jared (Brad Arner) attempts to profit off the game’s notoriety by bringing it back from the dead and turning it into a viral web series.

But after a group of students in the late 80s died for real while playing, the game was banned and forgotten. The original game was created back in the 70s. This adds an extra level of sneaking and hiding because you can’t trust anyone. Nobody is supposed to know who the killer is, except the person who drew it. For added fun, you add fake weapons that can be used by either party. Those who are “killed” have to remain in the game as dead bodies. The victims have to survive and not be killed. Get a group of people together in any place or area and draw cards that designate the players as either victims or the killer. This week the light shines on the low-budget hidden gem, Chill: The Killing Games.Ĭhill: The Killing Games is about a game called Chill with pretty simple rules. Garbage day shines a light on films, helping viewers pick them out in the ever-growing pile that is bad cinema. Including films as part of this list is not an insult, but instead an attempt to introduce them to a greater audience than before. Garbage day is about celebrating movies that have unjustly been looked down upon and cast away. Garbage Day isn’t about trash movies that should be thrown to the wayside. While small on budget, “Chill: The Killing Games” scores big with heart and creativity a surprisingly fun and entertaining mystery horror.
