Totally — Killer

Yet the film’s greatest strength is its emotional core: the relationship between Jamie and her teenage mother, Pam. In the present, their relationship is fraught with the standard adolescent disdain. Jamie sees her mother as a nagging, out-of-touch authority figure. By forcing Jamie to meet her mother as a peer—a frightened, insecure, sexually active young woman with her own dreams— Totally Killer performs a radical act of empathy. The film suggests that the generational divide is not a chasm of values but a failure of imagination. Jamie learns that her mother’s “annoying” overprotectiveness was born from a specific, unspoken trauma: surviving a serial killer at sixteen. The past is not just a funhouse of retro aesthetics; it is a crucible that forges the adults her generation struggles to understand.

If the film has a flaw, it is a common one among high-concept horror-comedies: a third act that rushes to resolve its temporal paradoxes with hand-wavy logic. The rules of time travel are treated as a suggestion rather than a system, and some character arcs (particularly the 80s boyfriend, Blake) are left disappointingly flat. However, these are minor quibbles in a film that prioritizes emotional coherence over scientific rigidity. The ending, in which Jamie returns to a slightly altered present and shares a genuine, tearful conversation with her now-softer mother, earns its sentimentality. It is a victory not just over a killer, but over the cold war of the generations. Totally Killer

In conclusion, Totally Killer is far more than its logline suggests. It is a film that uses the iconography of the slasher genre to ask serious questions: What do we inherit from our parents’ traumas? How does the media we consume shape our ability to survive? And why do we romanticize eras that were, for so many people, genuinely terrifying to live through? By answering these questions with a blend of gory kills, sharp wit, and genuine heart, Totally Killer achieves something rare. It is a horror film that kills the past not with a knife, but with the truth—and in doing so, makes a powerful case for listening to the future. Yet the film’s greatest strength is its emotional