IMDb RATING
3.9/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
A family getaway to a mountain town turns deadly when China launches a massive cyberattack against the USA, forcing former NSA engineer Duke Evans to fight to save his wife and daughter in t... Read allA family getaway to a mountain town turns deadly when China launches a massive cyberattack against the USA, forcing former NSA engineer Duke Evans to fight to save his wife and daughter in the New World Order.A family getaway to a mountain town turns deadly when China launches a massive cyberattack against the USA, forcing former NSA engineer Duke Evans to fight to save his wife and daughter in the New World Order.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
William Frederick Knight
- Albert Grimes
- (as William Knight)
William Ngo
- Chinese Officer
- (as William Wu)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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The preposterous premise of "Dragon Day," also known as "Invasion Day," is that the United States owes so much money to China that the Chinese just decide to invade.
By secretly placing malicious code into every electronic product manufactured in China, it effectively shuts down all communication, transportation, banking, etc.
What would China have to gain by coming into our country and ruining it, virtually guaranteeing we'd never be able to pay them back?
Now, because this movie cost less than your sofa to make, we aren't supposed to ask questions like that.
Actually, we don't see this invasion play out on the world stage at all.
No joke, this entire movie is about how the invasion of the United States by the People's Republic of China affects one guy and his family in their Oregon vacation home.
They get assaulted by hillbillies! They get threatened by cops! They run out of Coca-Cola!
Check it: There's one Chinese guy in this whole movie, and ironically he never meets this family.
One time, two starving kids knock on the door, and they each get handed a potato. That's it. You never see those kids again.
You'll just be going, "Wait, what?" at every turn of the plot, but you won't be able to take your eyes off it. This movie is like that weirdo bag lady who gets on the subway talking to herself, and your mom says, "Don't stare!" But you do. Because you can't not.
By secretly placing malicious code into every electronic product manufactured in China, it effectively shuts down all communication, transportation, banking, etc.
What would China have to gain by coming into our country and ruining it, virtually guaranteeing we'd never be able to pay them back?
Now, because this movie cost less than your sofa to make, we aren't supposed to ask questions like that.
Actually, we don't see this invasion play out on the world stage at all.
No joke, this entire movie is about how the invasion of the United States by the People's Republic of China affects one guy and his family in their Oregon vacation home.
They get assaulted by hillbillies! They get threatened by cops! They run out of Coca-Cola!
Check it: There's one Chinese guy in this whole movie, and ironically he never meets this family.
One time, two starving kids knock on the door, and they each get handed a potato. That's it. You never see those kids again.
You'll just be going, "Wait, what?" at every turn of the plot, but you won't be able to take your eyes off it. This movie is like that weirdo bag lady who gets on the subway talking to herself, and your mom says, "Don't stare!" But you do. Because you can't not.
I have never given such a low rating before, but this movie had no redeeming factors and it therefore deserved such a dubious distinction.
The acting was complete cardboard with most of the time my wishing the main characters would get killed off since they were so annoying. To add to the distaste, the characters simply weren't believable either.
Add to that an extremely poor plot with more holes than my grandfather's underwear, with a great big dollop of the incredulity bred of a hundred plot points where you yourself could think your way out of it or it simply wasn't feasible, and you honestly have a sincere waste of time.
The acting was complete cardboard with most of the time my wishing the main characters would get killed off since they were so annoying. To add to the distaste, the characters simply weren't believable either.
Add to that an extremely poor plot with more holes than my grandfather's underwear, with a great big dollop of the incredulity bred of a hundred plot points where you yourself could think your way out of it or it simply wasn't feasible, and you honestly have a sincere waste of time.
Low budget films can flop if they start too slow, but this one has some pace. The story was very intelligent, not overly complicated. The plot was simple, believable and no obvious holes. The directing was very good, give Mr. Travis a real budget :). The acting was average to decent, except the wife (Wallander), who's expressions at times left me confused to irritated. Maybe that's what she was going for.
The best part of the movie is the concept and plot. I'm a fan of IT as well as lo-tech, and who doesn't think about what you would do if things went sour. This has it all, and watching it you might learn a few things. It really makes you think.
Not wasted time at all, I was pleasantly surprised and would watch it again if friends ask.
The best part of the movie is the concept and plot. I'm a fan of IT as well as lo-tech, and who doesn't think about what you would do if things went sour. This has it all, and watching it you might learn a few things. It really makes you think.
Not wasted time at all, I was pleasantly surprised and would watch it again if friends ask.
I don't understand the reasoning behind some of the reviews for this film. It's fiction,so relating it to real life events is to no purpose.
For me,it was reminiscent of 'Threads',in that it posited the idea of a devastating event which changed everyday life in a bad way,though with contemporary ideas:technology rather than nuclear devastation.
The acting was good for the most part and it did not rely on spectacular special effects.
Instead,it acheived an extremely chilling effect as the story unfolded gradually.
I,for one,was left feeling that the scenario was not entirely unbelievable.
It engrossed me sufficiently to recommend it to anyone who thinks seriously about the state of our world and it's implications.
For me,it was reminiscent of 'Threads',in that it posited the idea of a devastating event which changed everyday life in a bad way,though with contemporary ideas:technology rather than nuclear devastation.
The acting was good for the most part and it did not rely on spectacular special effects.
Instead,it acheived an extremely chilling effect as the story unfolded gradually.
I,for one,was left feeling that the scenario was not entirely unbelievable.
It engrossed me sufficiently to recommend it to anyone who thinks seriously about the state of our world and it's implications.
Did you know
- TriviaThe "transmitter " is a Yaesu FRG7 which is a receiver
- GoofsHow come the sister's bracelet burned her when she left the cabin, but his burned him when he left the country and not earlier? I did not hear they had redesigned the bracelets. When Duke cooperates and disables the back door security breach, Phil says, "My thank-you gift to you: you're free to travel wherever you want in the Republic."
- Quotes
Duke Evans: All of our electronics... all these devices... can be accessed over a secret wireless network.
- ConnectionsReferences Flatland: The Movie (2007)
- SoundtracksByeBye
Written by Laurie Crook, Greg Thomas, Jeffrey Thomas, Ryan Fisher
Performed by Crooked Tom
Courtesy of Crooked Tom
- How long is Dragon Day?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $210,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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