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Wake Wood

  • 2009
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
9.1K
YOUR RATING
Wake Wood (2009)
Trailer for Wake Wood
Play trailer2:05
1 Video
15 Photos
Folk HorrorDramaHorrorThriller

The parents of a girl who was killed by a savage dog are granted the opportunity to spend three days with their deceased daughter.The parents of a girl who was killed by a savage dog are granted the opportunity to spend three days with their deceased daughter.The parents of a girl who was killed by a savage dog are granted the opportunity to spend three days with their deceased daughter.

  • Director
    • David Keating
  • Writers
    • Brendan McCarthy
    • David Keating
  • Stars
    • Aidan Gillen
    • Eva Birthistle
    • Timothy Spall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    9.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Keating
    • Writers
      • Brendan McCarthy
      • David Keating
    • Stars
      • Aidan Gillen
      • Eva Birthistle
      • Timothy Spall
    • 61User reviews
    • 92Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Wake Wood
    Trailer 2:05
    Wake Wood

    Photos14

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Aidan Gillen
    Aidan Gillen
    • Patrick
    Eva Birthistle
    Eva Birthistle
    • Louise
    Timothy Spall
    Timothy Spall
    • Arthur
    Ella Connolly
    • Alice
    Ruth McCabe
    Ruth McCabe
    • Peggy O'Shea
    Brian Gleeson
    Brian Gleeson
    • Martin O'Shea
    • (as Briain Gleeson)
    Amelia Crowley
    • Mary Brogan
    Dan Gordon
    • Mick O'Shea
    Tommy McArdle
    • Tommy
    John McArdle
    • Ben
    Aoife Meagher
    • Deirdre
    Siobhán O'Brien
    • Pharmacy Customer
    Alice McCrea
    • Lady Customer
    Johnny Fortune
    • Mechanic
    John Hand
    • Arthur's Helper 1
    Darragh Hand
    Darragh Hand
    • Arthur's Helper 2
    Steven McDonnell
    • Boy in field
    Simple the Bull
    • The Bull
    • Director
      • David Keating
    • Writers
      • Brendan McCarthy
      • David Keating
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews61

    5.59.1K
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    Featured reviews

    peter-sweeney

    An interesting find!

    Love these tucked away films that you chance upon. Nice, neat, right running time, little shocker.

    Its the premise thats of interest here and fascinating. A youngish couple losing their only child (and she says she cant have any more)and then given the chance to have her back, as she was, but for only three days. Given the emotional turmoil involved, and the couples position (a split is also on the cards), how many couples would go along with this. I suspect quite a few.

    This also comes along with i) not everyone playing by the rules i.e. lying (how long girl was dead) and ii) it comes at a price! The viewer knows this, he's watched a lot of horror films.

    Like the Irish feel, the ancient ways handed down in a localised village, the underlying creepy atmosphere, then again balanced by the modern i.e. the wind machines at the boundaries of the village.

    Nice touch with the life cycle, from death comes rebirth; the mixture of births e.g the dead rebirths, cesarean of the cows, and even Alice pulls her doll through a rubbish bag.

    Maybe Brendan Gleason ought to have played the squire, Timothy Spalls accent was a bit suspect.
    6trashgang

    old school Hammer

    I was happy when I heard that Hammer studios was back in business. So far they delivered 2 flicks, The Resident (2011) and this one. Wake Wood leans more towards the Hammer style then The Resident although both do have their own thing. Wake Wood has more red stuff. But that doesn't make a flick. My only point of negativity is the use of CGI. There is one scene that I didn't like, when they make a close-up of the child's neck and we see her wounds disappear. It was done 100% CGI and I hated it. I guess one shot is also CGI, when blood sputters out of a neck.

    But luckily the film has a good atmosphere. It takes place in Ireland and let that be the country of Paganism and Witchcraft. And that is what it's all about. Bringing back the death by old rituals. As I stated it do contain a lot of blood but it never becomes too gory. It was David Keating his first attempt to make a real horror. And he succeeded. Some shots were typical seventies style , even hammer style and the way it was edited was also a return to the seventies. The acting was okay. Only Eva Birthistle we knew from the horror The Children (2008). She even has a small nudity in Wake Wood.

    If I must choose which one, Wake Wood or The Resident, leans most to the old Hammer I would say wake Wood.

    Gore 2/5 Nudity 0,5/5 Effects 3/5 Story 3/5 Comedy 0/5
    amesmonde

    The Damp, the Dreary and the Dark.

    Following the unnecessary, yet excellent remake 'Let me In' Hammer returns with Wake Wood a supernatural chiller in which a child is brought back from the dead to comfort her parents for three days. But she's not quite the angelic child she was.

    Eva Birthistle plays the grieving mother Louise and Twelve Rounds (2009) bad guy Adian Gillen is exceptional as the deceased child's father. Reliable Timothy Spall and the child actress are notable and the supporting cast are solid. 

    There's some effective bloody gore, grizzly births, severed spines, dog attacks and killings. Some supernatural elements take place out of shot to avoid the use of CGI, which adds to the believability and saves the budget.

    Wake Wood is dark, damp and dreary just as it should be. Nevertheless, it is slightly stifled by a filmed for TV look. That aside, with a small budget director David Keating keeps the blood flowing and the pace going.  It benefits from plausibility and atmosphere with an on location shoot. There's plenty of shadows, eerie music, sharp editing and a grounded screen-play (by Brendan McCarthy) to keep you watching with a grin that Hammer may have a place in this century.

    With elements of  Don't Look Now, Case 39, Carrie, The Wicker Man and Pet Cemetery to name a few you could argue it's all be done before and better. However, Wake Wood's great ending debatably leaves you thinking sometimes less is more.
    4paul_m_haakonsen

    Would you bring her back?...

    Based from the movie's cover, then "Wake Wood" looked really interesting, so it was with some anticipation and expectation that I sat down and watched this movie.

    The story told in the movie was actually quite good, I will give the movie that much. Dealing with a family torn apart by the death of their little girl, then given the chance to see their deceased girl again for three days, and for three days only. But of course, something is amiss... Actually the story was much similar to the plot in Stephen King's "Pet Semetary" movie/book.

    For scare effects and scare value, then "Wake Wood" was a very weak cup of tea. There weren't any moments that made you jump in the seat or even had the hairs on your neck stand up. Not everything in the movie was bad, mind you. There were scenes and scenery that were working well for the movie, but it just never came to any scary moments.

    The acting in "Wake Wood" was alright as well. The movie was carried by Aidan Gillen (playing Patrick) and Eva Birthistle (playing Louise). The role of Alice (played by Ella Connolly) wasn't particularly well executed and could have been more creepy with another child actress.

    For a horror movie, then "Wake Wood" was a very uninspiring, uninteresting and non-entertaining movie. If you like horror movies, then there are far better ones out there. The movie is worth checking out for the story alone, though, just bear in mind that it is much similar to the works of Stephen King though.
    7Coventry

    In Wakewood, death isn't necessarily the end ...

    Even though they will forever remain linked to Peter Cushing, Christoper Lee and a whole variety of immortal Gothic horror movies produced during the sixties and seventies, it's still tremendously great news that Hammer Studios are back in business! The legendary British studios, of which I loved nearly everything they ever accomplished, make an exquisite comeback with the traditionally themed and old-fashioned spooky "Wake Wood". The plot borrows obvious and less obvious elements from a handful of famous genre classics, but it nevertheless stands on its own as a solid and competent horror movie that is occasionally very tense, disturbing and repulsive. Approximately one year after they tragically lost their only daughter in a rabid dog attack, the emotionally wrecked couple Patrick and Louise move to the small farmers' community of Wakewood, where he takes up his profession as a veterinary and she re-opens the local pharmacy. The town's patriarch Arthur informs Patrick and Louise that the entire town of Wakewood participates in a secluded and very secret Pagan ritual. Through the cadaver of a freshly deceased villager, Arthur can bring another dead person back to life for a period of three days, so that his/her family can spend some beautiful last moments together and properly prepare their goodbye. There are a few strict rules, however, including that the resurrected person's passing was less than one year ago and that he or she is forbidden to leave the town's perimeters. Blinded by their desire to be reunited with their daughter, the couple takes the risk of altering a few facts and convinces the town to bring back their beloved Alice. Needless to say horrible events ensue, as Alice doesn't exactly return as the cute and cherubic girl she once was… As said, "Wake Wood" clearly sought inspiration with some genuine classics, like "Pet Sematery" (bringing back a dead child), "The Wicker Man" (the entire town participating in the pagan ritual) and "Don't Look Now" (processing the tragic loss of child). This isn't a negative comment; however, as writer/director David Keating processes the subject matter in a respectable way and adds a modern and personal touch wherever possible. Arguably, the film is somewhat too slow-paced and pretentious in terms of editing (too many collages and brief insignificant flashbacks), but you can't really blame a film crew for trying to be stylish, now can you? The climax is a bit of a letdown, mainly because the events are too hectic, incoherent and also all of a sudden extremely cruel and sadist. There were some violent parts and grisly images throughout the entire film, like the harrowing dog attack at the beginning and the macabre Wakewood ritual, but the last ten minutes are really quite sick. It's a shame to let the movie end in such a negative and illogical way. Terrific acting performances here as well, particularly from the reliable Timothy Spall ("Sweeney Todd" and the "Harry Potter" franchise) as the town patriarch. Very much recommended, can't wait to see what Hammer does next.

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    Related interests

    Florence Pugh in Midsommar (2019)
    Folk Horror
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Wake Wood was the first theatrical release from genre production company Hammer Films in thirty years.
    • Goofs
      In the first hour of the movie a silver Irish reg Saab is the family car but in the last 20 minutes a black Northern Irish reg Audi is the family car.
    • Quotes

      Alice: [as Peggy binds a resurrected Alice with a blessed noose] That... Won't Work On Me!

      [un-binds herself and picks up a sharp spike]

    • Connections
      Featured in Breakfast: Episode dated 24 March 2011 (2011)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 25, 2011 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • Ireland
      • United Kingdom
      • Sweden
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Khu Rừng Chết Chóc
    • Filming locations
      • County Donegal, Ireland
    • Production companies
      • Exclusive Film Distribution
      • Hammer Films
      • Vertigo Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $10,342
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39:1

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