Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill (2022) (2024)

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2022 Directed by Louisa Warren

Synopsis

The tooth fairy is back to finish what she started...

Sammy, a surviving teacher rejoins her colleagues back at work. After hearing some odd noises around the classrooms Sammy feels she is being watched. When she hears the familiar knocking at the door she realizes her nightmare is not over.

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  • Cast
  • Crew
  • Details
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  • Releases

Cast

Kate Sandison Danielle Scott Bao Tieu Stephen Staley Chris Cordell Paula Coiz Meg Matthews Samantha Cull Zuza Tehanu Patricia Mañas

DirectorDirector

Louisa Warren

ProducersProducers

WriterWriter

Ben Daly

Executive ProducersExec. Producers

Nicole Holland Stuart Alson

Studios

ITN Distribution ChampDog Films

Country

UK

Language

English

Alternative Title

Tooth Fairy 5

Genre

Horror

Releases by Date

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Digital

24 Oct 2022
  • Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill (2022) (3)UK

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Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill (2022) (4)UK
24 Oct 2022
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  • Review by ram<3 ★½ 1

    ladies and gentlemen, we have an improvement right here

  • Review by gavcrimson ★★★

    Nice to know that people are getting use out of British primary schools during the holidays by letting Louisa Warren shoot Tooth Fairy sequels at them. This one continues on from the series reboot of part 4, in which the tooth fairy was reimagined as a facially deformed serial killer rather than the supernatural creature of the first three. This new tooth fairy has been keeping a low profile during the two years that have past since the events of the last one- which must have been a bit difficult considering the character looks like Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz after she opened the Lament Configuration box. However she pops her head out for part 5 in order to…

  • Review by vinnie ½

    someone teach the tooth fairy how to open doors

  • Review by Cary ★½ 3

    Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill is a meandering low-budget creepypasta/I-bought-a-weird-mask-let's-make-a movie about a disgruntled dentist (?) slash mother (?) slash escaped luatic who looks like the Pale Man and talks like Salad Fingers. From context clues, I gather that in a prior movie she murdered a school's worth of children and personnel; in this one she's come back to murder the sole survivor and all her new colleagues. I don't know why, but it has to do with her son being missing, and maybe because YouTube makes it too easy to learn dentistry now (?). She wants to kill people in pretty standard slasher fashion, but also must extract a keepsake tooth, usually with a hammer and chisel. We aren't…

  • Review by Bear Rowell ★★

    Finally, some real cinema.

    The mask-first approach to filmmaking.
    Pretty bold to show full mask in bright fluorescent lighting in the first TWO minutes.
    Here is the Tooth Fairy, an escaped mental patient slasher (gee that's a new one). She mumbles around to different people and stabs their teeth out with a plastic knife (blunted metal, y'all, we can tell it's plastic, just use blunted metal) or a hammer.

    I'm just unreasonably comforted by awful British horror movies about general public domain characters on killing sprees.
    Bad news is, this is the fifth of these apparently, that I watched out of order. Good news is, my viewing is sorted for a couple days.

    Main complaint: NO ONE WAS KILLED WITH A DRILL WHAT THE f*ck

  • Review by Dustin Baker ★★½

    Fares slightly better than the last one, feeling slightly more polished and as though some extra resources were available, but then again, shooting in a larger space with natural light tends to fare better than a cramped cabin and what seemed to be a single key light in that one. There's less annoying characters here, and it sticks to the fairly typical slasher pattern this time rather than dicking about for extended periods, and this film's finale isn't just a series of playing Scooby-Doo doors for twenty minutes, so there's a lot here that functions better than the previous film. Just, for no real purpose really other than to kill 90 minutes as generic slasher filler. It's not the worst of the Jeffrey productions or of those directed by Warren herself, but it certainly isn't the most memorable. At least I could understand what the hell the Tooth Fairy was mumbling this time.

  • Review by DumbBox ½

    They got to teach these people how doors work.

  • Review by rainycube

    Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey was better than this.

  • Review by audrey farnsworth

    So I watched this on mute? Because I heard the tooth fairy’s voice and I was like no thank you. Don’t need it! Like also she’s not exactly a tooth fairy, more like a mouth freak. This movie should be called “mouth freak”

  • Review by CalpalHDPod ★★

    Fun mask that gets progressively worse as the movie progresses. About what you’d expect for something of this budget.

  • Review by FewerScarf ½

    I would rather Rip out all of my teeth than rewatch this absolutely horrid movie.

  • Review by Shayelle ★★★

    New-to-me horror October night 12; I should’ve watched this with subtitles because I couldn’t understand a darn thing the Tooth Fairy said.. another thing.. did I miss where she used a drill? Cause there was a lot of hammering.

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Tooth Fairy: Drill to Kill (2022) (2024)

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