Despite taking place in 1994 it has timid female asian SWAT officer who ends up killing the other white male officers, who are all seemingly very chubby and dumb looking. Every segment has the female (mostly POC) survive. Final segment is about christian white supremacist militia who call themselves patriots and they are portrayed as extreme idiots who most end up accidentally killing each other (yes really) when trying to shoot the monster.
It is just an anti-cop/anti-white/anti-male snuff film.
This reminds me of City on a Hill which is based in the 90s yet they still use terms like POC.
I would have thought the POC thing was clear anachronistic propaganda (lol yes as opposed to historically accurate propaganda) but just a few days ago I found a small clip from a show from 2000 (so still culturally the 90s) of Terry Zwigoff—the guy that made that R. Crumb doc—showing off his record collection and he uses the term "people of color."
I was really surprised to hear that phrase used so early so my only conclusion was it was being used by far left/artsy people even that far back.
Second half of this clip iirc https://youtu.be/2YPjIFC3Hrk
Now. Would "people of color" be used by everyday people? No, but it was apparently a thing.
And it probably doesn't have to be said, but Zwigoff is, of course... ah what the hell, he's Terry (((Zwigoff))).
Still, as an aside, the Crumb doc's worth a watch. A sobering portrait of a really messed up man from a messed up family.