Primate

Primate

movieR
January 1, 2026
2Based
Analysis Score2/10
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TL;DR Verdict

Primate delivers gore-soaked chimp terror with zero politics or agendas—organic diversity, pure survival thrills, and old-school horror make it a woke-free breath of fresh air (2/10).

Detailed Analysis

Primate is a straightforward, gore-soaked animal attack horror film that delivers brutal thrills without any ideological detours, focusing purely on survival against a rabid pet chimpanzee in a Hawaii family home. The diverse cast, including Oscar winner Troy Kotsur as the deaf father whose condition naturally heightens tension through communication barriers and silence, feels organic to the modern setting and ensemble dynamic rather than forced or agenda-driven. Other actors like Benjamin Cheng and Amina Abdi add incidental multiculturalism fitting for Hawaii, but identities play no focal role in arcs, plot, or messaging. Director Johannes Roberts emphasizes practical effects, suspense, and old-school horror influences like Cujo, with interviews highlighting creative gore and animal terror over activism. No themes of systemic injustice, identity politics, or social lectures intrude; it's unapologetic entertainment praised by horror fans as a 'breath of fresh air.' Any 'controversy' stems from a critic walking out over gore, not politics, and audience reception is overwhelmingly positive with no 'go woke go broke' backlash. This refreshing lack of progressive intrusion allows the film to succeed on pure visceral merits.

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