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IMDbPro

Let Us Prey

  • 2014
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Douglas Russell in Let Us Prey (2014)
Trailer for Let Us Prey
Play trailer2:22
1 Video
29 Photos
DramaHorrorThriller

Held in a remote police station, a mysterious stranger takes over the minds and souls of everyone inside.Held in a remote police station, a mysterious stranger takes over the minds and souls of everyone inside.Held in a remote police station, a mysterious stranger takes over the minds and souls of everyone inside.

  • Director
    • Brian O'Malley
  • Writers
    • Fiona Watson
    • David Cairns
    • Brian O'Malley
  • Stars
    • Liam Cunningham
    • Pollyanna McIntosh
    • Bryan Larkin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Brian O'Malley
    • Writers
      • Fiona Watson
      • David Cairns
      • Brian O'Malley
    • Stars
      • Liam Cunningham
      • Pollyanna McIntosh
      • Bryan Larkin
    • 91User reviews
    • 102Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Let Us Prey
    Trailer 2:22
    Let Us Prey

    Photos29

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    Top cast15

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    Liam Cunningham
    Liam Cunningham
    • Six
    Pollyanna McIntosh
    Pollyanna McIntosh
    • PC. Rachel Heggie
    Bryan Larkin
    Bryan Larkin
    • PC. Jack Warnock
    Hanna Stanbridge
    Hanna Stanbridge
    • PC. Jennifer Mundie
    Douglas Russell
    Douglas Russell
    • Sgt. MacReady
    Niall Greig Fulton
    Niall Greig Fulton
    • Dr. Duncan Hume
    Jonathan Watson
    Jonathan Watson
    • Ralph Beswick
    Brian Vernel
    Brian Vernel
    • Caesar Sargison
    James McCreadie
    • Mulvey
    Sophie Stephanie Farmer
    • Young Rachel
    Andrew Parker
    • Young Man
    Holly Beattie
    • Car Crash Victim
    Katie Gilbourne
    • Mrs. Hume
    Max McCarthy
    • Dr. Hume's Son
    Ellen Keaveney
    • Dr. Hume's Daughter
    • Director
      • Brian O'Malley
    • Writers
      • Fiona Watson
      • David Cairns
      • Brian O'Malley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews91

    5.811.5K
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    Featured reviews

    Dethcharm

    "Well Then, The Doctor Will See You Now!"...

    After one of the better opening sequences in any horror movie in recent memory, LET US PREY begins.

    A mysterious man (Liam Cunningham- DOG SOLDIERS) heads for the sleepy little town of Inveree, Scotland. Upon his arrival, bizarre occurrences begin taking place.

    In the local police precinct house, rookie PC. Rachel Heggie (Pollyanna McIntosh- THE WOMAN) joins the skeleton crew of officers and two inmates for what should be a long, dull night. Right away, we realize that PC. Heggie is the only cop who does her job by the book, while her comrades seem to have never even heard of the book!

    When the mystery man arrives at the station, the nightmare unfolds, as he seems to know secrets about everyone around him. Secrets that result in desperate acts and death.

    Bleak and sinister, this movie maintains this atmosphere throughout its running time. It also contains some shocks and gruesome revelations. With all other characters as fodder, it's really down to Ms. McIntosh and Mr. Cunningham to carry the film. An excellent supernatural thriller, the gore elements may turn some away, which is a shame since this is a hell of a good movie!...
    7stencilman

    Wicked Fun

    Let Us Prey features a police station in a ghost town. Literally. You cannot find any people in this town making you wonder what these idiots are policing. Regardless, a stranger played by Liam Cunningham (Ser Davos from Game of Thrones) appears in the police station and sets off a chain of events which results in everyone in the station confronting/unleashing (mostly the latter) their inner demons.

    And boy are those demons nasty or what! The film is not that scary but it is quite fun and has a good sense of humor. It also has good performances from Cunningham and Pollyanna McIntosh as a likable rookie named Rachel. Also in the mix are a gallery of interesting, if not likable characters such as a really creepy sergeant, his two vengeful subordinates alongside Rachel, a (not so) slightly unstable doctor, a grammar Nazi wife-beater and a drunk-driving teen.

    Overall, the movie is quite fun with a delightfully nutty climax. The 5.9 rating is a bit too low. Do give it a look!
    7Coventry

    You will meet a tall, bearded raincoat-stranger...

    The plot of "Let Us Prey" might very well be derivative and predictable (I can already list at least 5 similar titles without even thinking too hard), but debuting writer/director Brian O'Malley nevertheless managed to deliver a compelling, brutal and sinisterly atmospheric horror/thriller. Straight from the eerie opening sequences – with a particular fascination for black birds, by the way – you'll immediately notice that O'Malley must be a tremendous genre lover and definitely knows the classics. The script borrows all kind of ideas and elements from different horror sub genres, from raw 70's grindhouse features to grotesquely silly 80's slashers, but somehow everything neatly and coherently interweaves into a tense and gruesome little film. Liam Cunningham, the extremely charismatic and marvelous actor who previously starred in "Dog Soldiers" and Dario Argento's "The Card Player", is well-cast as the mysterious stranger (complete with beard and clichéd long raincoat) who comes wandering into the police precinct of a quiet and remote Irish community. He seems to know an awful lot about the darkest secrets of everyone that is there – cops as well as petty criminals – and clearly intents to penalize them and mess up their minds beyond repair. It's up to Constable Rachel Heggie, on her very first night at a new location, to deal with the overload of maniacal tendencies that suddenly come to the surface. The Brussels International Festival of Fantastic Films promoted "Let Us Prey" as a – and I quote – demonic version of John Carpenter's "Assault on Precinct 13". That is actually a rather apt description, and I can also add the film is properly produced and brings forward impressive special effects, make-up art and a handful of cool stunts. The primarily stern plot makes a couple of absurd loops near the end, including the most derailed serial killer in recent cinema history, and admirers of harsh violence and explicit slaughter certainly won't be disappointed. Cunningham receives good and solid support from the rest of the cast, including powerful females Pollyanna McIntosh (watch "The Woman" if you dare) and Hanna Stanbridge, whom I already admired in the obscure "Outcast" and whose accent makes Irish sound like the sexiest language on earth.
    8gregsrants

    Nice Surprise Hit of the Festival

    When director Brian O'Malley introduced his new film, Let Us Prey, via a prerecording in front of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival he informed us that his intention was to make a timeless horror classic. To accomplish this, he set on out to deliver a film that could not be dated (watching Let Us Prey ten years from now and there is nothing in the fashion, look or feel of the film that would immediately reference 2014) and that had a synthesizer styled score reminiscent of the great John Carpenter films of the 1970's and 80's. Check and check.

    Let Us Prey stars Liam Cunningham (Game of Thrones) as Six, a mysterious drifter who is hit by a vehicle driven by Caesar (Brian Vernel) on a quiet town road. Casear is immediately taken into custody by first-day-on-the-job Constable Rachel Heggie (Pollyanna McIntosh), but Cunningham's Six character cryptically disappears. It is while at the police station we are introduced to the remainder of the cast which includes a Sargent, two Constables that are lustfully engaged, a wife beating prisoner and a doctor who is called to assist when Six suddenly appears at the front door of the station.

    The veteran Constables and Sargent do not immediately warm up to the by-the-book newbie in Rachel, but their personal feelings towards her routine are quickly swept to the side once Six begins to instigate mayhem in the prison taking over the minds and souls of all those with a dark past to hide. And this is when the fun really starts.

    Each character shows a history of violence in their backstories from the simple (hit and run) to the extreme (mass murderer) and when a prior transgression is revealed, Six is there to ensure their life pays for their wrongdoing.

    With a backdrop of a fantastic musical score (as promised) there are fights, shootings, beatings, murders and attempted murders as things at the station escalate quickly and deadly for all those involved.

    Cunningham is a standout and plays the mysterious Six with devilish glee. The film hinges on Cunningham's character and the well-trained thespian delivers the goods with a Clint Eastwood cool. Pollyanna McIntosh is equal to the task as the freshman fish-out-of-water new Constable. She is equally beautiful and tough and McIntosh walks this line with the ease of a veteran.

    The story goes a bit off the rails towards the end as some of the character's revealed background stories and subsequent actions are a bit 'out there'. But it is a means to an end to heighten the violence and give the audience the good time expected from the action/horror intention.

    Let Us Prey was a surprise delight and the perfect way to begin winding down the Toronto After Dark Film Festival. It was violent and fun and the ending opened the door to a multitude of possibilities and, hopefully, sequels.

    www.killerreviews.com
    7hitchcockthelegend

    The number of the beast?

    An apparent victim of a hit and run, a mysterious stranger is held at a remote police station and starts to take over the emotional state of staff and inmates alike.

    It's not a new premise, something which is being held against Brian O'Malley's film like it's a crime, but the execution, the technical guile, and atmospheric touches brought to the piece, mark this out as a horror film of some merit. Boosted by having the great Liam Cunningham in the lead role, it's a film that shocks and awes with each passing chapter. It revels in the bloody aspects that unfold, positioning the vile nature that some human's are prone to right at the forefront, and with bloody impact.

    Piers McGrail's cinematography is superb, the bold and beautiful shine of the blues and golden browns mingle disconcertingly with the down and dirty feel of the police cells, the latter of which appropriately marry up with the characters on show. Steve Lynch's score is a treat, a real nerve bothering piece of work, gnawing away at the senses in the same way that Cunningham's character tugs away at the emotional conditions of his prey. It's a film of many pleasures for the so inclined, it does get away from itself a little at the end, asking a little too much of the viewer, but it doesn't kill the pic and this is very much a horror necklace worth wearing on a night out. 7/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Caesar said he's redecorating his cage (by carving his name into the floor with his fingernail), Beswick mocks him by saying he should try to learn how to spell it first. The camera shot shows Caesar had completed 3 letters so far: CEA.
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h 13 mins) Cameraman is visible in the glass in the background, shortly after Sgt. MacReady shoots the shotgun into ceiling, as the camera pans around.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Duncan Hume: This is such a one-horse town.

      Six: And now it's a pale fucking horse.

    • Connections
      References Hawaii Five-O (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Gather Up the Devils
      (uncredited)

      Written and Performed by Steve Lynch (feat. Masha)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 12, 2015 (Ireland)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Ireland
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Aprisionados
    • Filming locations
      • High Street, Slamannan, Falkirk, FK1 3EX, Scotland, UK(cafe shop)
    • Production companies
      • Bord Scannán na hÉireann / The Irish Film Board
      • Creative Scotland
      • Fantastic Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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