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Dead Mine

  • 2012
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
Dead Mine (2012)
The legend of Yamashita's Gold lures a treasure hunter and his group deep into the Indonesian jungle. Once they are trapped in an abandoned World War II Japanese bunker, they face the terrifying reality that the only way out is to go further in.
Play trailer1:39
1 Video
60 Photos
B-ActionB-HorrorDark FantasySupernatural FantasySupernatural HorrorActionAdventureFantasyHorrorSci-Fi

The legend of Yamashita's Gold lures a treasure hunter and his group deep into the Indonesian jungle. Once they are trapped in an abandoned World War II Japanese bunker, they face the terrif... Read allThe legend of Yamashita's Gold lures a treasure hunter and his group deep into the Indonesian jungle. Once they are trapped in an abandoned World War II Japanese bunker, they face the terrifying reality that the only way out is to go further in.The legend of Yamashita's Gold lures a treasure hunter and his group deep into the Indonesian jungle. Once they are trapped in an abandoned World War II Japanese bunker, they face the terrifying reality that the only way out is to go further in.

  • Director
    • Steven Sheil
  • Writers
    • Ziad Semaan
    • Steven Sheil
  • Stars
    • Miki Mizuno
    • Sam Hazeldine
    • Ario Bayu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Steven Sheil
    • Writers
      • Ziad Semaan
      • Steven Sheil
    • Stars
      • Miki Mizuno
      • Sam Hazeldine
      • Ario Bayu
    • 25User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Teaser
    Trailer 1:39
    Teaser

    Photos60

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Miki Mizuno
    • Rie
    Sam Hazeldine
    Sam Hazeldine
    • Stanley
    Ario Bayu
    Ario Bayu
    • Captain Tino Prawa
    Les Loveday
    Les Loveday
    • Warren Price
    Carmen Soo
    Carmen Soo
    • Su-Ling
    Yanda Djaitov
    Yanda Djaitov
    • Papa
    • (as Jaitov Tigor)
    Joe Taslim
    Joe Taslim
    • Djoko
    Mike Lewis
    • Ario
    Jimmy Taenaka
    Jimmy Taenaka
    • Ryuichi
    Faizal Razali
    • Headphones Pirate
    Chief Jumino
    • Pirate
    Ushe Badu
    • Pirate
    Fernando Reinaldo
    • Pirate
    • (as Sgt Fernando Reinaldo)
    Horaz
    • Pirate
    Byron Hulbert
    • Lead Imperial Guard
    Chris Nolte
    Chris Nolte
    • Lead Imperial Guard
    Vernon Lewis
    Vernon Lewis
    • Lead Imperial Guard
    Afwan
    • Imperial Guard
    • Director
      • Steven Sheil
    • Writers
      • Ziad Semaan
      • Steven Sheil
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    4.53.4K
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    Featured reviews

    2claudio_carvalho

    A Good Example of How Bad a Movie can Be

    In an isolated island in Indonesia, an expedition is apparently seeking the legendary Yamashita's Gold. Out of the blue, they are attacked and seek refugee in an abandoned Japanese bunker. Soon they discover that the place was a secret laboratory in the World War II where the prisoners were guinea pig in weird experiments. Further, they are trapped inside with strong and resistant creatures created by these experiments. Will they succeed to escape from the dead mine?

    I really do not understand how producers (HBO, not Sci-Fi) can spend their money in garbage like that. The story is a terrible rip-off of "The Descent" and I believe anyone who read it would have at least some doubts to make a movie. The dialogs are extremely poor and the motive of the expedition is a mess. Who are the guys that shoot the expedition? How the Japanese survivor had eaten and drunken along all those years trapped in the bunker with the creatures? How someone could inject a rusted syringe with a sixty and something year-old substance in another person with the intention of healing him? The group splitting to be more easily killed is one annoying clichés. The awful lack of conclusion seems to show the intention of a sequel, meaning more wasted money. Last but not the least; the acting is more dreadful than the creatures. My vole is two.

    Title (Brazil): "Mina Abandonada" ("Abandoned Mine")
    4timelesswind

    Started OK but the last part left me with a bad aftertaste

    I wanted to watch a horror movie yesterday and after a quick search I chose Dead Mine. Well,the "horror in a mine" concept is nothing rare so I didn't expect to encounter something new plot wise to begin with. What I was expecting to see in an Indonesian B-movie like this were some nice killing scenes and probably some scary or intense moments. Also, most horror B-movies nowadays usually make up for their "bad" plot with lots of blood and gore but that's not the case here. This movie isn't much scary either. Even at moments that the protagonists are hunted down and the watcher should feel the intensity of it the director just failed to make it happen.

    Coming to the story now, I have to say it was not that bad.It actually had more potential than it delivered if I can say that. Of course, there are cliché characters placed here and there but it happens to most movies(I even found myself liking the character of Warren's gf) .The plot is quite good at first(not something entirely fresh but decent) and seems like it might lead somewhere good. Still the bad pace, the lack of attention to detail and the horrible 15-20 last mins of the movie where the story goes off track ruin the effort made before.

    I know that what I've said so far will probably make you not wanting to watch this movie at all but its not entirely unwatchable. It's still better than many movies out there. So if you like horror movies and got nothing else to watch give it a try. It will be a decent one-time watch, though the last part of the movie might leave you with a bad aftertaste like in my case.
    4S1rr34l

    Undead Samurai Super-Soldiers Still Fighting WWII - Awesome, Yeah? NOT!!!

    Here we go again, different location, different nation, but the same WWII bunker story. Instead of the German's and the Nazi's we have the Japanese and the undead Samurai. This in itself should have made for some great and spectacularly gory fighting scenes... but it doesn't.

    This isn't just down to the direction and special effects though; the story plays a major part in this disappointment. The writers, Ziad Semaan and Steven Sheil, meanders through the telling. It starts well and then gradually slows and slows. There are a lot of pregnant pauses and translating. All of which isn't necessarily needed. Then by the time, the crap hits the fan and the undead Samurai super-soldiers appear (which is way too late in the film) the director cannot increase the pace enough to re-envigorate the viewer.

    The director, Steven Shiel, isn't too bad, though a bit more imagination wouldn't have gone amiss. Everything about the shoot is average. There's no play with light. Even though they're in an ancient bunker the lights work brilliantly - Great Japanese Electronics. Not once do the lights go out to create tension. Unfortunately, Sheil isn't able to create tension or suspense in the light. He could have tried different camera angles, blurred backgrounds with moving shapes-come-shadows. But, no. However, this doesn't damage the film too bad but it would have made it so much better.

    The best thing about this film is the strength of the cast. Each of them gives a good performance of their character. Sam Hazeldine is particularly good as Stanley. He has screen presence. You know when he's on-screen and he delivers his lines superbly. He makes his character realistic and you can't help but believe in him. Two couples have some nice chemistry together. One is Warren Price (Les Loveday) and Rie (Miki Mizuno) who are lovers but just think about making the quick buck. The others are, Captain Tino Prawa (Ario Bayu) and his second in command - these two have a fine bromance going for them. The acting does lift the story and the film, but not enough. It's watchable, though, I don't think you'll be recommending it to anyone.

    If you've not watched a WWII Bunker horror flick before... There are better than this around to cut your teeth on. Check out the Outpost series. However, if you're all watched up and there's nothing else on (which was my case) then this will pass an hour and a half. But the slowness and meandering story may bore you a little.

    Feel free to check out my Absolute Horror list-come-chart to see this ranks or to find something to new to view.
    7DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Dead Mine

    Dead Mine chalked up a number of firsts in the region, being HBO Asia's debut original feature, and Singapore based company Infinite Studios' new soundstage facility in Batam, Indonesia being used for the production. Technically, the movie boasts some excellent production values, from stunts to props, sound engineering and special effects to art direction, with the soundstage adding a dimension to filmmaking around the region, with one more slated for Singapore, but as the adage goes, never forget about the story, as it is still king.

    The screenplay by Ziad Semaan and director Steven Sheil has an interesting premise, but unfortunately lapsed back to genre clichés. If the pace was kept high, and story tight, then Dead Mine would have been something of a shiny debut for the collaboration between companies and geographies. As an action-horror, it took quite a while for characters to be established around the usual caricatures that pepper the genre already, before the first big set action sequence acted as catalyst for the narrative to move forward, thrusting the entire cast into the titular location. Things slowed down a lot, in between posing, spewing rote dialogue, and traversing the many nooks and crannies of Dead Mine, but when it finally shifted to the high gear, it showed potential that never really reached a high.

    Centered around the legend of Yamashita's treasure, the WWII Japanese General who had been rumoured to stash some handsome gold somewhere in the South East Asian region, Sulawesi, Indonesia becomes zeroed in for exploration, funded by corporate rich kid type Price (Les Loveday), who had brought along his girlfriend Su-Ling (Carmen Soo) for the ride, with his engineer Stanley (Sam Hazeldine) in tow, and researcher Rie (Miki Muzuno) to provide the brains for their expedition. Needing protection as they enter a foreign land, they engage the soldiering mercenaries in Captain Tino Prawa (Ario Bayu), with his rag tag team consisting of Djoko (Joe Taslim), Ario (Mike Lewis) and strong man Sergeant Papa Ular (Bang Tigor). My initial fears it may be something like Sanctum, but thankfully this was better, but not without its own illogical moments that exist for plot convenience.

    Once they get all chummy and acquainted, the set action pieces are what stands out in the film, aside from the nicely done production sets that made the Dead Mine an incredibly believable location, with two separate tiers being the sandy underground, and the concrete labyrinth above it which suggests the location was more than a potential treasure store, but houses something a lot more sinister, harking back to experiments and torture. There's no lack of gore that adhered to a limit set to keep the ratings as low as possible, so plenty of violence actually happen offscreen, before cutting to show the bloody, gory end result.

    And the makeup and costuming department is no slack either, having creature designers work overtime to come up with Mutant POWs, which serve up a lot more terror than the more powerful Imperial Guard type enemies decked in Samurai gear, because as mentioned, the pace could have been kept high to add a degree of urgency, tension and genuine dread to the entire situation. There's plenty of running, and careful treading within the mine, but a little speeding up of lengthy explanations would have been appreciated, and perhaps making it a wee bit more of a fair fight would have sweetened it up a little, than to have it quite one- sided.

    Between the cast members, I thought the Indonesian actors triumphed in the film, especially with Ario Bayu's charismatic allure that made it believable that he's the de-facto leader a skilled crew would work under. Anyone who had watched The Raid: Redemption would be familiar with Joe Taslim, and it's interesting now that Hollywood had already come knocking on his door with the Fast and Furious franchise. Unfortunately he has only a bit role here, and doesn't show off his martial arts for his role. Bang Tigor is yet another actor with immense presence on screen, and that's not because he's bulked up.

    Still, Dead Mine is a genuine showreel of the kind of production HBO (and its Asia arm) is capable of, with a decent production budget, collaborating with talent in the region, both in front of and behind the camera, and yet again a testament to Infinite Studio's promotion of how a soundstage facility that's really a first of its kind here, could benefit filmmakers to be a little bit more ambitious in telling a story that can be set almost anywhere the imagination dares to venture. So long as it's driven by a strong script, I'm pretty sure we can be set for a lot more variety in the kind of films that could be told in the months to come.
    jamestkirk-29928

    Zero - that's right zero stars!

    I wish I could say this review contained spoilers because it would suggest there was something to spoil about this film. However, it was so abject that the director and assembeld cast have already done that for you. I won't bore you with the details of the risible plot because there are plenty of other reviewers who have done that. What they have not told you is that this film is a cheat. Yes a cheat. I don't care if you haven't paid a penny to watch it, if you watch it to the end, as I stupidly did, it will cheat you out of almost two hours of your life. You know that when a horror film starts out with a group of six, the monsters/ aliens/ zombies/ evil incarnations et al will pick them off one by one. Par for the course. Except in the final scene, we have one character turned into a zombie/ living dead figure another who submerges into a lake to escape the ridiculous Samurai warriors and a plaintive girl struggling up a beach with the warriors emerging behind her and.........roll the credits. Seriously, as the warriors approach her, it goes to black screen and then credits. So what happened to our hero who dived into the lake, the zombified character and the girl? Don't know. I am only writing this because I feel so angry that the film didn't even offer a cop-out ending. There wasn't even an ending! Did they run out of money? Did they become as bored as the rest of us and thought "Hey what, y'know everyone let's call it a wrap because there's a great cocktail bar near here and it's gotta be more fun than doing this." Cheats!

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    Related interests

    Mathew Karedas in Samurai Cop (1991)
    B-Action
    Bridget Hoffman in The Evil Dead (1981)
    B-Horror
    Doug Jones and Ivana Baquero in Pan's Labyrinth (2006)
    Dark Fantasy
    Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, and Ernie Hudson in Ghostbusters (1984)
    Supernatural Fantasy
    Daveigh Chase in The Ring (2002)
    Supernatural Horror
    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Elijah Wood in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
    Fantasy
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller
    Band of Brothers (2001)
    War

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Goofs
      When Tino and Stanley are talking in the beginning, between shots Prawa as sweating, then not.
    • Quotes

      Stanley: If you are going through hell, keep going.

    • Crazy credits
      "Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead or undead, is purely coincidental."
    • Connections
      References The Valley of Gwangi (1969)
    • Soundtracks
      Japanese Spirit (Yamatodamashii)
      Composed by Ken Chong

      Lyrics by Kazz

      Vocals by Kazz and Hazel Lua Yan Han

      Mix by Kazz (as Kazz Sato)

      Produced by Shariza Kamil

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Dead Mine?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 3, 2013 (Indonesia)
    • Country of origin
      • Indonesia
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Khu Mộ Tử Thần
    • Filming locations
      • Batam, Indonesia
    • Production company
      • Infinite Frameworks Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $26,597
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 27m(87 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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