Borrowing its themes and tonal cues from sources as disparate as Clueless, Heathers, the Scream movies, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, Nightcrawler, and Lucky McKee's bonkers All Cheerleaders Die, Tyler MacIntyre's Tragedy Girls is a glittery, energetic, wicked, gory, enjoyably impish throwback slasher flick for the narcissist Instagram generation. It plays like Amy Hecklering's Clueless, but if Cher and Dionne were meaner, even more vain, and also serial killers. That they are serial killers, however, doesn't mean they're not lovable.
The titular Tragedy Girls are a pair of high school cheerleaders named Sadie (Brianna Hildebrand, Negasonic Teenage Warhead from Deadpool) and McKayla (Alexandra Shipp, Storm from X-Men: Apocalypse), two pretty young women who live in the top half of their high school's pecking order. Sadie and McKayla, partly out of extreme boredom, but mostly because they wish to build their own @TragedyGirls brand, have taken to murdering the occasional local or classmate in the hopes they could “cover” the violence for their fledgling pop news site. They then would organize vigils, be filmed wringing their hands, and generally foment the usual narrative of personal tragedy as has been spelled out for them by years of constant media consumption.
from IGN Reviews http://ift.tt/2xOBLd8
This could be a real lead forward for personal gaming... Revolutionise gaming
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