I think the reason that House is a better movie, is that for the first 45 minutes they don't even kill anyone. We get sucked into their sick, twisted world. We get to know who they are as people. We also get outsider perspectives of the Firefly clan; the four teenagers, the police officers, the one girls' uncle, etc. It wasn't just the Firefly clan torturing and murdering the whole movie.
I really liked House, I liked the combo of both, but Rejects wins slightly because I think the concept is just a bit cooler. Yes, in the House we get to see them through some normie people's eyes and that is relatively standard in horrors, although you could clearly see that Rob loved his villains and gave them special time to shine. I really love that Rejects are completely their pov. As a viewer I didn't feel forced or manipulated to like them the way some movies do it (for instance, he didn't try to get into forced sentimentality, the humor of it all helped). I didn't mind the torture, it was honest in my opinion - it's what gets those characters off so why not show it to the viewer?
Yeah, the director likes them, it is their pov, but you're still getting them as they are with their brutality, pointless violence and sadism. And some viewers still got to root for them.
Sheriff definitely was interesting. To me he really represented something you often see with people. People who are normal, consider themselves moral, but still have that same rage and sadism in them, they just need to feel they are directing it towards a justified target. Very well made character.
Yeah, you're right, in the end to me this was all just very fun, but I wouldn't call it superficial. I can enjoy gore and slashers but a movie still needs to have that something to stand out, this movie really did it for me. I just loved these characters. They left a strong impression. I don't know about being believable, it's believable that they wouldn't be relatable considering what they are, so why not accept that these individuals could exist?
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