
In 2009, Emily Hagins was the subject of the documentary, “Zombie Girl: The Movie.” The feature focused on Hagins and her moviemaking dreams, embarking on a mission to create her first project as a 12 year old, finding help from her parents and pals as they attempted to generate a proper horror experience. “Zombie Girl: The Movie” was a delight, and Hagins has seemingly pulled off the impossible, managing to build something of a career as she became an adult, eventually launching three follow-up projects (“My Sucky Teen Romance,” “Grow Up, Tony Phillips,” and “Coin Heist”) and various short films, maintaining some longevity in an industry that’s a true survival challenge. 2023’s “Sorry About the Demon” is Hagins’s fourth offering, and she sticks with her love of genre entertainment, attempting to mount a horror comedy about a twentysomething man and his war with insecurity as he deals with a recent breakup and the reality that he’s sharing a new rental home with a demonic force of doom. “Sorry About the Demon” isn’t ambitious, remaining dialogue-driven and sticking with a single location, and Hagins has some difficulty deciding what kind of movie she wants to make, as the comedy is limp and the scares are nonexistent in this overlong effort. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com



















