Slice movie review & film summary (2018)
Matthew Perez
Updated on March 09, 2026
Playfully enough, the movie starts with Vesely’s death, as he plays a dopey pizza guy named Sean whose throat is slit before the opening credits. His murder causes a stir in the town of Kingfisher, where Sean's employer Perfect Pizza Base has been founded on a haunted burial ground that was once an insane asylum, creating 40,000 ghosts. But the ghosts have been pushed away from their homes to a different neighborhood called “Ghost Town,” while a band of middle-aged white women protest outside the pizza place, demanding that the pizzeria be closed out of respect for the spirits. A reporter (Rae Gray) is investigating the murder with no help from a photographer (Joe Keery of “Stranger Things”), while two bumbling cops (Tim Decker and Will Brill, their accompanying music seemingly inspired by “Twin Peaks”) follow their own hunches.
Oh, and Bennett plays an elusive Chinese food delivery outlaw who is a werewolf and maybe the culprit. He previously worked at the Chinese food restaurant that was there before Jack (Paul Scheer) opened up Perfect Pizza and hired the likes of Astrid (Zazie Beetz), who gets into the murder mystery mess as she was dating Sean before he was killed.
Vesely has a big imagination and even larger ambition for this project, but there are limits to his on-the-fly world-building: for example, we don’t fully understand the rules of being a ghost after a person is killed, or how much other monsters co-exist with humans, even if we know what these Halloween mainstays symbolize here. And there’s even a clear limit with Bennett’s on-camera availability, as he’s in maybe 20 minutes of a movie, causing the story to focus on its roughly-sketched supporting characters, with-hit and-miss comic success. Vesely at times struggles to keep the movie busy with these characters, sometimes opting for overt stylization (like bad-ass slow-motion shots, as propped up by Ludwig Goransson and Nathan Matthew David’s score), as the focal murder mystery doesn’t have a proper immediacy.
But counter these shortcomings with “Slice"'s truly inspired strokes, like when it presents the fast food version of a “Fast & Furious” vehicle meet-up (and bestows us another wry Y’lan Noel comic performance), or how the production design makes Kingfisher feel like it's the most fun horror movie lot you could live on. And when Bennett does show up, he has a true movie-star quality (with help from the "Wanted" signs plastered in earlier scenes that tease his impending arrival). With striking ease, Bennett displays a playful nature that makes for a few laughs, but most of all leaves you wanting more of him as an actor. In particular, his lack of ego towards his star presence would be excellent for a romantic comedy. (Netflix, you up?)