The Breach
- 2022
- 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
4.8/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Counting down his last days as Chief of Police in the tiny town of Lone Crow, John Hawkins must investigate one last case when a mangled body with uncanny wounds washes up on the shores of t... Read allCounting down his last days as Chief of Police in the tiny town of Lone Crow, John Hawkins must investigate one last case when a mangled body with uncanny wounds washes up on the shores of the Porcupine River.Counting down his last days as Chief of Police in the tiny town of Lone Crow, John Hawkins must investigate one last case when a mangled body with uncanny wounds washes up on the shores of the Porcupine River.
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The breach had all the makings of an excellent cult horror feature, but likely will not reach those heights.
A trio of small towners go to explore a house on the other side of a river to get insights into the grisly death of a scientist. What they find gets progressively worse until things all come to a head.
Unfortunately for the film nobody can act, save for Natalie Brown who does the best she can in the thankless role of the scientists estranged wife looking for both her missing husband and their daughter.
I was about to turn the film off until she stepped into it and elevated the film while she was on screen.
The special effects are decent, but they don't save the film from feeling unbearably hokey and melodramatic versus tense and scary.
The writing itself leaves a lot to be desired, I wanted to like this movie, some of the plot was interesting. Occult underlinings, physics, dimensional travel, I feel maybe reading the book would have been a better experience.
The music, is not great to put it kindly, it feels very out of place and far too melodramatic at times, detracting from the film instead of adding to it.
Perhaps Rue Morgues second attempt at a film will be better. Sorry guys, this one's a miss.
5 stars for Natalie Brown and the effects.
A trio of small towners go to explore a house on the other side of a river to get insights into the grisly death of a scientist. What they find gets progressively worse until things all come to a head.
Unfortunately for the film nobody can act, save for Natalie Brown who does the best she can in the thankless role of the scientists estranged wife looking for both her missing husband and their daughter.
I was about to turn the film off until she stepped into it and elevated the film while she was on screen.
The special effects are decent, but they don't save the film from feeling unbearably hokey and melodramatic versus tense and scary.
The writing itself leaves a lot to be desired, I wanted to like this movie, some of the plot was interesting. Occult underlinings, physics, dimensional travel, I feel maybe reading the book would have been a better experience.
The music, is not great to put it kindly, it feels very out of place and far too melodramatic at times, detracting from the film instead of adding to it.
Perhaps Rue Morgues second attempt at a film will be better. Sorry guys, this one's a miss.
5 stars for Natalie Brown and the effects.
There are some kind of cool practical effects but they're shown in bright light and the digital enhancement is not good. It reminded me very much of From Beyond but with a drastically lower budget.
Some monsters near the end just kind of seem like zombies stumbling around outside, which is disappointing. The idea isn't bad but as a horror fan, I really want a lot more practical effects and the lighting is rather flat.
You can see elements of The Fly in there too but it's not really unique enough on its own. The pacing is a tad slow too although I was entertained enough. The ending was great. I probably wouldn't watch it again though.
Some monsters near the end just kind of seem like zombies stumbling around outside, which is disappointing. The idea isn't bad but as a horror fan, I really want a lot more practical effects and the lighting is rather flat.
You can see elements of The Fly in there too but it's not really unique enough on its own. The pacing is a tad slow too although I was entertained enough. The ending was great. I probably wouldn't watch it again though.
Pretty good reworking of the Lovecraft tale that was used as the basis for the far better film From Beyond made in 1986. I've read a novel by Nick Cutter, who was the writer/adapter of this screenplay, and enjoyed it enough to give this film a chance.
The acting from the entire cast is decent, and it is nice to see a lot of practical effects used in lieu of CGI. While the final third is exciting, it leaves too many unanswered questions, although it does have a nasty final sting for the viewer.
I'd say it's worth 90 minutes of your time if you don't mind a slow buildup to the third act. I was never bored with it.
The acting from the entire cast is decent, and it is nice to see a lot of practical effects used in lieu of CGI. While the final third is exciting, it leaves too many unanswered questions, although it does have a nasty final sting for the viewer.
I'd say it's worth 90 minutes of your time if you don't mind a slow buildup to the third act. I was never bored with it.
So yeah... this is based on the book by Nick Cutter. He also wrote one of the craziest horror books called, THE TROOP. He also wrote one of my favorites called, THE DEEP.
His writing style is very aggressive. He really gets dirty & brutal, some really wicked stuff... not for everyone lol.
HOWEVER! I then see this on Amazon... I had semi hopes of it being good.
What I got was... well... sorta bland & nothing special...the monster was neat when first shown (bedroom) and how it moved in that scene was great... then... you start seeing a bunch of them lol and well... let's just say some of them are painfully obvious a rubber body suit...
The story was fine ish... but Cutters books are SO SO SO in depth, & fleshed out that you just can't really properly explain a doorway built to other dimensions in a 90 minute film lol.
Actually would've probably been a very decent 4 part mini series or something!
The ending I saw coming a mile away... I'll just say... Cutter doesn't do "happy endings" in his novels.
This had a lot of potential to be a 7+ rating movie imo.
If you're just killing time? It'll do. If you're looking for some wicked good horror from outer dimensions? Just go with THE VOID.
His writing style is very aggressive. He really gets dirty & brutal, some really wicked stuff... not for everyone lol.
HOWEVER! I then see this on Amazon... I had semi hopes of it being good.
What I got was... well... sorta bland & nothing special...the monster was neat when first shown (bedroom) and how it moved in that scene was great... then... you start seeing a bunch of them lol and well... let's just say some of them are painfully obvious a rubber body suit...
The story was fine ish... but Cutters books are SO SO SO in depth, & fleshed out that you just can't really properly explain a doorway built to other dimensions in a 90 minute film lol.
Actually would've probably been a very decent 4 part mini series or something!
The ending I saw coming a mile away... I'll just say... Cutter doesn't do "happy endings" in his novels.
This had a lot of potential to be a 7+ rating movie imo.
If you're just killing time? It'll do. If you're looking for some wicked good horror from outer dimensions? Just go with THE VOID.
There are some interesting ideas here, to be sure. Unfortunately, it feels like it borrows heavily from numerous different sources, fails to deliver a coherent storyline, well defined characters, good pacing, or a satisfying conclusion. Apparently, this is the directorial debut of one of the head honchos at Rue Morgue magazine. I can cut a little slack for lack of technical experience; not so much for failures of execution in areas that really shouldn't have been that hard to fine tune. It does feature some excellent creature effects toward the end; it just doesn't really explain why the creatures are there or why they appear when they do. All in all, not horrible, but not really worth watching either, IMO. Maybe this direcor will do better next time.
Did you know
- TriviaSlash, guitarist from Guns 'N Roses executive produced this film and contributed to the score. The cast also includes Alex Lifeson, guitarist for the retired Canadian band Rush.
- GoofsAround 17 minutes, John Hawkins is on the phone while in a motor boat. Although the motor sounds can be heard, the background while he is on the phone is unchanged.
- SoundtracksBuilding Demons
written by James Zirco Fisher
performed by James Zirco Fisher
- How long is The Breach?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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