100 Bloody Acres

100 Bloody Acres is a 2012 Australian horror comedy film directed and written by brothers Colin and Cameron Cairnes.

Damon Herriman and Angus Sampson star as opportunistic, rural fertiliser manufacturers who resort to using human remains for their business.

While making local deliveries and the occasional roadkill pick up, Reg encounters the crash site of a van, the driver dead inside.

[7] Matt Zoller Seitz of RogerEbert.com called it "the best low-budget horror comedy since Shaun of the Dead, and one of the most assured first features in ages.

"[8] Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times wrote that film lacks originality but "has its own hick charm, mostly because of performers who never overplay their hands.

"[9] Mark Olsen of the Los Angeles Times called it a "giddy, delightful gross-out horror-comedy mash-up".

[10] Drew Hunt of the Chicago Reader wrote, "Though entertaining enough as a genre exercise, the film is too simplistic to transcend its base concept.

"[11] Megan Lehmann of The Hollywood Reporter called it an "off-the-wall Australian splatter-comedy" with "lively performances" and "a shrewdly structured screenplay".

[12] Richard Kuipers of Variety called it "a gory and funny riff on the trusty standby of city kids being menaced by rural types".

[13] Kwenton Bellette of Twitch Film wrote that it "stand out from most horrors; it plays with convention and molds it into a sick and twisted form.