Wyrmwood
Wyrmwood | |
---|---|
Theatrical film poster | |
Directed by | Kiah Roache-Turner |
Produced by | Tristan Roache-Turner |
Written by |
Kiah Roache-Turner Tristan Roache-Turner |
Starring |
Jay Gallagher Bianca Bradey Leon Burchill |
Music by | Michael Lira |
Cinematography | Tim Nagle |
Edited by | Kiah Roache-Turner |
Production companies |
Guerilla Films |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 98 minutes |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | $160,000 |
Wyrmwood (also known as Wyrmwood: Road of the Dead) is a 2014 Australian action-horror film that follows a mechanic who finds himself faced with zombie hordes. This feature film directorial debut of Kiah Roache-Turner[1] had its world premiere on 19 September 2014 at Fantastic Fest.[2]
Plot
Mechanic Barry lives in the Australian outback with his wife Annie and daughter Meganne. During a meteor shower, Barry's sister Brooke is attacked in her Bulla, Victoria studio by her model and her assistant, who have suddenly become zombies. She calls Barry and warns him to get out of the city. He, Annie, and Meganne don gas masks and fight their way to the family car. When Meganne and Annie remove their gas masks they become infected and zombify, and Barry is forced to kill them with a nailgun. He runs out of nails before he can kill himself.
Chalker, another survivor, finds Barry and knocks him unconscious when Barry attempts to kill himself with Chalker's gun. Barry asks Chalker to take him to Brooke's studio, unaware that a military unit has taken her captive in the back of a truck that serves as a mobile lab for mad scientist Doc. While Doc experiments on the zombies and Brooke, Chalker's truck stops working. Chalker and Barry continue on foot, and Benny, another survivor, mistakenly kills Chalker. Benny, who previously had to kill his infected brother, and Barry team up and come upon a garage staffed by Frank and his assistant. Frank explains that all flammable liquids have become useless. However, the group accidentally discovers zombie breath and blood are flammable, and they devise a zombie-powered engine. During their escape, Frank's assistant becomes infected and is used as fuel.
Barry, Benny, and Frank discover zombies stop breathing flammable gas at night, enabling them to run faster. As they hole up in the truck overnight, Frank says he believes the zombies resulted from the meteor shower; as told in the Bible, a star called Wyrmwood has fallen, making part of the world bitter. After waking up from a nightmare, Barry catches a zombie on fire and accidentally sets the truck's compressor alight. While putting out the fire, Frank is bitten and asks Barry to shoot him; Barry does. The next day, Barry and Benny come across a military-driven, electric-powered truck. The two drivers, after revealing that those with an A negative blood type are not affected by the disease, offer to lead Barry and Benny to Brooke, who they claim is in military custody nearby. Meanwhile, Brooke learns she can now telepathically control zombies as a result of the experiments. With the help of several zombies, she kills Doc, escapes the truck, and joins Barry and Benny.
Barry's truck stalls after the soldiers accidentally kill the zombie powering it. While taking a pit stop for Brooke to fetch them a zombie, Benny is shot in the stomach. When they later pull over to take care of Benny, the soldiers catch up and subdue them. The soldiers reveal their plan is to decapitate Brooke and take her head to their commanding officer. Barry plans to kill them all in an explosion, but Benny instead sacrifices himself to turn into a zombie so Brooke can control him to overpower the soldiers. He kills two of the three soldiers, but the captain kills him and shoots Brooke in the chest. Barry challenges him to a fistfight but ends up shot when the captain retrieves his pistol. After shooting a zombie, the captain's face is splattered with zombie blood, and Barry ignites his head with the matches. Before Barry can shoot him, Brooke rises and commands a horde of zombies to eat the captain alive.
Barry and Brooke, back on the road, come across the lab truck again. They ask the soldiers what they have in the back of the truck; when they refuse to answer, Brooke commands a new group of zombies to attack them and tear them apart.
Cast
- Jay Gallagher as Barry
- Bianca Bradey as Brooke
- Leon Burchill as Benny
- Luke McKenzie as The Captain
- Yure Covich as Chalker
- Catherine Terracini as Annie
- Keith Agius as Frank
- Meganne West as Meganne
- Berryn Schwerdt as The Doctor
- Cain Thompson as McGaughlin
- Beth Aubrey as Charlotte
- Sheridan Harbridge as Sherri
- Damian Dyke as Thompson
Reception
Critical reception for Wyrmwood has been positive,[3][4] earning an approval rating of 78% on Rotten Tomatoes. Twitch Film and The Hollywood Reporter both praised the film,[5] and Twitch Film commented that the film's script is original.[6] Variety also commented upon this element, as they enjoyed the character of Brooke "being injected with a chemical concoction that somehow gives her the ability to control the hungry hordes" and that "other nifty little touches, such as Frank and Barry’s discovery that zombie blood can be used as a substitute for gasoline, Brooke’s psychic powers bring something fresh to a horror subgenre that’s received a particularly heavy flogging in recent years."[7] Shock Till You Drop also gave a favorable review, stating that they found it to be an "impressive feature debut".[8] IGN awarded it 7.5 out of 10, saying "Wyrmwood may tread familiar ground, but it's still a bloody good time."[9]
Wyrmwood was reviewed in The West Australian : "with clear inspirations in Dawn of the Dead, The Evil Dead, Bad Taste, Re-Animator and ... Mad Max, from its Gothic-looking helmets, masks and weapons to its retro-fitted vehicles, Wyrmwood looks and plays a lot better than its $160,000 budget suggests." [10] Howard Gorman of SCREAM: The Horror Magazine gave Wyrmwood a favourable review, stating that "the film is hard to fault," and "a frenetic and exquisitely constructed film that plays homage to cult living dead films whilst confidently breaking away from by-the-book zombie concepts." [11]
Release
The film premiered as Wyrmwood: Road of the Dead[12] on 19 September 2014 as part of the Fantastic Fest.[13] The limited theatre release was on 12 February 2015,[14] It was originally supposed to have a one night only theatrical release in Australia, opening on 74 screens, but an overwhelming response and sold out sessions across the country saw its run being extended for weeks in some cinemas.[15] It was followed by a Video on Demand release, over IFC Midnight on 13 February 2015.[16]
Sequel
In February 2015, a plan for a sequel was announced, with a potential return of the original actors Jay Gallagher, Bianca Bradey, Leon Burchill, Luke McKenzie, and Yure Covich.[17] The release is proposed for early 2017, after the release of a “mental ghost" film, from Kiah & Tristan Roache-Turner.[18]
References
- ↑ Zimmerman, Samuel. "WYRMWOOD" Director Kiah Roache-Turner on Zombies, Remakes and the "ROAD OF THE DEAD". Fangoria. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Topel, Fred. "Fantastic Fest 2014 Interview: Kiah & Tristan Roache-Turner on ‘Wyrmwood’". Crave Online. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Macomber, Sean. ""WYRMWOOD" (Toronto After Dark Review)". Fangoria. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Adams, Mark. "Wyrmwood (review)". Screen Daily. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Scheck, Frank. "'Wyrmwood': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Martin, Peter. "Fantastic Fest 2014 Review: WYRMWOOD, A Wild, Wild Apocalypse". Twitch Film. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Kuipers, Richard. "Busan Film Review: ‘Wyrmwood’". Variety. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Turek, Ryan. "Fantastic Fest Review: Wyrmwood a Solid Zombie Film – a Mix of Something Old, Something New". Shock Till You Drop. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ http://uk.ign.com/articles/2015/02/02/wyrmwood-road-of-the-dead-review
- ↑ Harvey, Shannon (10 February 2015). "Mad Max meets zombies". The West Australian. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
- ↑ Gorman, Howard (23 September 2014). "WYRMWOOD: Film Review". Scream: The Horror Magazine. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
- ↑ Zimmerman, Samuel. "Fantastic Fest Clip: Australian Zombie Film, "WYRMWOOD"". Fangoria. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ "WYRMWOOD". Fantastic Fest. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Turek, Ryan. "WYRMWOOD limited theaters Thursday, February 12th, 2015 from IFC Midnight!". Shock Till You Drop. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ "The little Aussie film that could: Wyrmwood more pirated than 50 Shades of Grey".
- ↑ Turek, Ryan. "WYRMWOOD limited theaters and VOD next Friday, February 13th, 2015 from IFC Midnight!". Shock Till You Drop. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
- ↑ Wyrmwood at the Internet Movie Database
- ↑ Miska, Brad. "The Australian Brothers Behind Zombie Horror ‘Wyrmwood’ Talk Success, Sequels". DC. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
External links
- Wyrmwood at the Internet Movie Database
- Wyrmwood Official Trailer on YouTube
- IndieGoGo campaign (now ended)