it never occurred to me, the secondary purpose of lighting a character on fire is to provide true set lighting on a dark set.
makes me think of Palmer from The Thing -- at the time i was watching it, i was thinking, "phew. one less of those mothers to worry about." now i'm thinking i should have been thanking him for making the frigid exterior of the base at night visible at all.
Bummer, that first screen grap looks pretty nice, but yeah, I think low budgets often lead to poorly lit movies--maybe it's the first thing they decide to scrimp on?
In this different take on a zombie like apocalypse
people are infected with a virus that makes them violent toward the
uninfected, they still talk but they don’t make much sense. Daniel has
run out of gas and seeks refuge at a local farm. There he encounters
April, the paranoid gun toting lone resident of the farm. Reluctantly,
she allows him to stay on with her. All seems to be going swimmingly as
they go through daily routine, feed the chickens – check, walk the dog –
check, kill the crazies that got caught in the barbed wire – check.
Things start going wrong when Kate, another uninfected female, shows up
at the gate asking if she can rest up for awhile. April feels threatened
by Kate’s presence and worries that she will lure Daniel away with her.
The distraction causes her to get careless and the infected breech the
gate landing them in an all out scuttle for survival.
[Image]
This one starts out with some promise but quickly falls flat on it confusing face. The cameraman should be beaten for all the dizzying nonsense he filmed. The insertion of quick flashbacks amid facial close ups as the couple struggle with the infected mounts up to be one giant mass of, “what the fuck is going on here!” Everyone has dark hair and the big fight scene takes place at night so you can’t figure out who is who. I was hoping someone would get set on fire just to add a little light to the scene, not that it would have helped much. The sound quality was also an issue, for some reason the voices were low and the background music was much louder making it even more difficult to decipher the dialog through their thick Scottish accents. On the upside, the scenery was beautiful, green rolling hills and picturesque skies. Makes me want to vacation there.
"The Dead Outside"
8 Comments -
Just be sure to vacation during non-zombie season!
October 04, 2012 5:41 AM
"I was hoping someone would get set on fire just to add a little light to the scene..." Lol!!!!!!!
October 04, 2012 6:44 AM
My god, it sounds like they just didn't want to show you the movie.
October 04, 2012 8:17 AM
Yes that's exactly how it felt!
October 04, 2012 9:07 AM
Sounds like a stinker but I always give Scottish movies extra credit because of their adorable accents.
October 04, 2012 11:17 AM
it never occurred to me, the secondary purpose of lighting a character on fire is to provide true set lighting on a dark set.
makes me think of Palmer from The Thing -- at the time i was watching it, i was thinking, "phew. one less of those mothers to worry about." now i'm thinking i should have been thanking him for making the frigid exterior of the base at night visible at all.
October 04, 2012 3:20 PM
Bummer, that first screen grap looks pretty nice, but yeah, I think low budgets often lead to poorly lit movies--maybe it's the first thing they decide to scrimp on?
October 04, 2012 4:16 PM
yikes, another one to skip!
October 04, 2012 5:45 PM