After Last Season

After Last Season is an independent movie from Index Square Productions, released in 2009 and shown in only four theatres upon its release. According to the official synopsis, it is about two medical students who use experimental neural chips to figure out the identity of a killer that has been murdering their classmates. Said chips allow characters to project their thoughts. The plot also involves supernatural forces, long philosophical conversations and a Mind Screw ending.

The film is notorious for its No Budget facsimile seen through settings, acting performances, computer-generated sequences, and music that many say would fit that description. The resulting factors have led most reviewers to wonder whether or not the movie was a serious effort or a parody, Word of God insists it's the former.

The film gained notoriety after the trailer was originally released online. The notoriety only grew once the final product premiered. 'After Last Season garnered further exposure after it was briefly featured on The Spoony Experiment. The film's distributors asked The Spoony One to take his videos down, and Spoony's treatment of the film is now available as an iRiff to be played alongside a legally acquired DVD copy.

This film provides examples of:

 * All Just a Dream: . To be clear.
 * Captain Obvious: "The end of a season means the beginning of a new one."
 * Dull Surprise: All the acting in this movie.
 * Hand Wave: The reason for the graphics is said to be because of the poor transmission of thoughts by the brain chip.
 * Hollywood Psych
 * Leave the Camera Running: The director feels it necessary have the camera focus on various shots of nothing or of people doing nothing.
 * Mind Screw
 * No Budget: Don't believe it? Well then... three words: Cardboard MRI machine.
 * It looks like it has no budget but it actually had a shooting budget in the tens of thousands and a post production budget in the millions (mostly for distribution and the CGI sequences).
 * The Tropeless Tale: Of course, making one of these is an impossibility, but to come this close has to be a benchmark of sorts.