Johnny’s life is all gone wrong. He may not have tried putting things in the right place, but none feel appropriate in their place too.
He has grown into a serial killer, who has affinity with corpses, which is why he dives in the world of violence as a necrophiliac. He kills people without developing any motive or sense. But his habits didn’t stop him from falling in love, and he chose not one but two girls, and with both of them, his relationship symbolized unrequited love. Soon enough, he finds that an old nemesis is after him. He used to be an adversary equal, but has now become one of the biggest crime lords. Above all, there is the Death Dealer, who has improvised ways and games to wreak havoc in the lives of people. Bloodstruck film becomes a challenging exercise for Johnny, putting him into the world of mayhem, with his mind at loss of any plan to deal with it other than his usual killing habits, which he utilizes to the fullest.
Can Johnny escape the horrors of Death Dealer, or that of his old enemy, or the haunting rejection posed by the two girls he loved? Or will the society Johnny lives in become his board game, where he would decide steps as per his own wish, and where to lose will be to lose his own mind? Depicting true horrors of what a man’s schizophrenic attitude can bring to his doorstep; Bloodstruck strikes out every possibility of making things look simple and easily conceivable.