Wowza, it’s been years since somebody covered something by Michelle D’Alessandro Hatt, and it looks like that brave little army is all grown up. Now taking place at a house party, our 4 girls come across a new dilemma in their college years. No, they aren’t dealing with a 20-page paper being due in a short timeframe, or a complex calculus class, or even final exams. This incident has some rowdy boys who think they have enormous genitalia but don’t realize how microscopic their minds are while thinking they can get away with anything like taking advantage of women. Our original actors from the first don’t reprise their roles, possibly due to aging, but we get some other girls who do just as well. And in this particular instance, it’s not Em who seems to have the main focus, but she does have some involvement in helping out (played by Emma Thomson) but this time one of the other girls, K (Tamia Bailey) has a problem. As you may recall, it’s those rapists at the house party. Em along with Dee (Sam McCall) and Lu (Sunmin Oh) see K being lead up to a higher level room of the house and go to check it out. Upon arrival they come across a freaky sight and after a rescue, they decide to teach these guys a lesson with the most subtle approach they can imagine which seems to involve kegs, and bondage. I can’t say much else than that, but let’s just say those men will never mess with a single woman again, that is, if this lesson got through their thick skulls and made itself comfortable in their tiny brains.
A short but worthwhile film that presents quite a message. Much like the first one, it’s got interesting visuals and vibrant colours, a mix of main characters with the same initiative of winning a battle, and adding some creeps who get what they deserve. These films may not seem like much to some people, but sometimes a short film is easier to make and it may be more than you expected when you watch it because it has an interesting way of showcasing the story.