On a dark country road Patrolman Dan Carter (Aaron Poole) encounters a young man named James (Evan Stern) staggering out of the woods. James is obviously hurt, so Carter brings him to the nearest available hospital, but this turns out to be a bad idea on multiple levels. The hospital has recently suffered a major fire and is running on a skeleton crew — basically one doctor and three nurses — and one of those nurses turns out to be Dan’s estranged wife Allison (Kathleen Munroe). It is made apparent that their marriage is tense because of the recent loss of their unborn child — the dangers of childbirth will become a major recurring event in this film — and then to make matters worse the hospital is soon besieged by a group of hooded cultists.
Monday, March 4, 2019
The Void (2016) – Review
Basing your movie on Lovecraftian horror is not an easy feat, making a successful one is even trickier, but two Canadian filmmakers found themselves inspired by Guillermo del Toro's repeatedly failed attempts to get his own Lovecraftian film, At the Mountains of Madness, into theaters, so with a little money — i.e. crowdfunded — writer/directors Steven Kostanski and Jeremy Gillespie brought forth a film called The Void, one that nicely follows in the footsteps of Roger Corman’s The Dunwich Horror and John Carpenter’s In the Mouth of Madness.
On a dark country road Patrolman Dan Carter (Aaron Poole) encounters a young man named James (Evan Stern) staggering out of the woods. James is obviously hurt, so Carter brings him to the nearest available hospital, but this turns out to be a bad idea on multiple levels. The hospital has recently suffered a major fire and is running on a skeleton crew — basically one doctor and three nurses — and one of those nurses turns out to be Dan’s estranged wife Allison (Kathleen Munroe). It is made apparent that their marriage is tense because of the recent loss of their unborn child — the dangers of childbirth will become a major recurring event in this film — and then to make matters worse the hospital is soon besieged by a group of hooded cultists.
On a dark country road Patrolman Dan Carter (Aaron Poole) encounters a young man named James (Evan Stern) staggering out of the woods. James is obviously hurt, so Carter brings him to the nearest available hospital, but this turns out to be a bad idea on multiple levels. The hospital has recently suffered a major fire and is running on a skeleton crew — basically one doctor and three nurses — and one of those nurses turns out to be Dan’s estranged wife Allison (Kathleen Munroe). It is made apparent that their marriage is tense because of the recent loss of their unborn child — the dangers of childbirth will become a major recurring event in this film — and then to make matters worse the hospital is soon besieged by a group of hooded cultists.
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