
Super Hybrid (2011)
1h 35m | PG-13
Late one night, a mysterious car is brought into the Chicago police impound garage after a deadly traffic accident. The on-call mechanics soon discover the car has a mind of its own. With hundreds of horsepower and two tons of reinforced steel at its command, it's a seemingly unstoppable killing machine capable of outrunning -- and outwitting -- humans.
Director: Eric Valette
Studio: Stallion Media
Genre: Horror
Video: 720p
Cast

Shannon Beckner
as Tilda

Oded Fehr
as Ray

Ryan Kennedy
as Bobby

Adrien Dorval
as Gordy

Melanie Papalia
as Maria

John Reardon
as David
Reviews
Should have been much worse than it was. _Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product._
**_A night of vehicular hell at a Chicago impound garage_** After a street accident, a mysterious car is brought to the city parking lot whereupon the midnight crew are thrust into an unbelievable life-or-death situation. “Super Hybrid” (2010) meshes ideas from “Killdozer” and “Christine” but adds a fresh concept and the milieu of a big city impound garage. It’s superior to the former, but not great like the latter. Shannon Beckner is effective as the protagonist, Tilda, while Melanie Papalia is worth a mention as Maria. The first act is compelling in the manner of, say, “The Hidden,” but I started losing interest a little by the last act. There’s some predictableness and, while I don’t mind the trope of the unlikely female rising to the challenge, it wasn’t necessary to paint the ex-military guy in such a negative light (Oded Fehr). Just because someone’s a boss and tells subordinates what to do in order to get things done, it doesn’t automatically make him/her evil incarnate. The switch to coldhearted bumbling moron doesn’t ring true. Meanwhile the parting shot is eye-rolling in the manner of “Abominable” and the future “Dark Was the Night.” Still, if you can roll with its weaknesses, “Super Hybrid” is thrilling enough, albeit one-dimensional, if you want something along the lines of “Killdozer” or “Christine.” The movie runs 1 hour, 34 minutes, was shot in Regina, Saskatchewan. GRADE: B-/C+