Leprechaun's Revenge

Evil has a new holiday.

5.1
20121h 28m

An evil leprechaun who has been imprisoned within the roots of a majestic old oak tree, is accidentally set loose on St. Patrick's Day. Once free, he takes out his bloody revenge on the descendants of the people who originally imprisoned him.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Leprechaun's Revenge - Official Trailer HD - Billy Zane / William Devane

Leprechaun's Revenge - Official Trailer HD - Billy Zane / William Devane

Cast

Photo of Billy Zane

Billy Zane

Sheriff Connor O'Hara

Photo of Courtney Halverson

Courtney Halverson

Karen O'Hara

Photo of William Devane

William Devane

Pop O'Hara

Photo of Dave Davis

Dave Davis

Dax Spence

Photo of Andrea Frankle

Andrea Frankle

Mrs. Jones

Photo of Kevin Mangold

Kevin Mangold

The Leprechaun

Photo of Azure Parsons

Azure Parsons

Officer Peterson

Photo of Dane Rhodes

Dane Rhodes

Wally 'Happy' O'Shannon

Photo of Danny Cosmo

Danny Cosmo

Leprechaun Man

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

5/10

**_A malevolent Leprechaun is on the loose_**

In the town of Keening in eastern USA, a teenager (Courtney Halverson) inadvertently resurrects a creature linked to her Irish heritage while out hunting with her grandad (William Devane). They attempt to convince her skeptical father, who happens to be the sheriff (Billy Zane), as they try to figure out how to stop the murderous lil’ devil.

"Red Clover" (2012) was originally titled “Leprechaun’s Revenge,” but it has nothing to do with the series featuring Warwick Davis. The creature here is uglier, humorless and more malevolent, ripping faces off, disemboweling victims and cutting a person in half. The scriptwriter wrote “Headless Horseman” and the contemporaneous “American Horror House,” as well as directed “Sharknado” the next year. This is cut from the same TV-budget cloth.

Redhead Courtney Halverson is decent as the teen protagonist with her unique look, but she’s almost anorexic looking. They needed someone who is able to keep the viewer’s attention in a flick of this ilk, like Cindy Busby in “Behemoth” or Danielle C. Ryan from “Snowbeast,” both of which came out a year earlier. Erin Karpluk from “Wyvern” is another good example while Joelle Westwood in “The Hunting” is a more recent one.

Yet the green-hued cinematography is welcome and I liked how the actors took the material seriously with an occasional stab at droll humor. The father’s explanation for the missing mother, however, is ridiculous and leaves a bad taste, along with the ending in general.

The flick runs 1 hour, 28 minutes, and was shot in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

GRADE: C

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