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Doomsday
(Theatrical - 2008)
Rogue Pictures
Director: Neil Marshall
Writer: Neil Marshall
Cast: Rhona Mitra, Bob Hoskins, Craig Conway, Lee-Anne
Liebenberg & Malcom McDowell
Review By: Adam Tracey
Britain, Current Times. A deadly virus known as the Reaper
Virus has broken out infecting millions killing hundreds of
thousands. In a final act of desperation, hoping to
guarantee the infected a massive wall, guarded by machines
guns that destroy anything that moves, is erected. Thirty
years later an apparent outbreak of the virus has threatened
to get out of control and ravish the city again. But there
is hope, satellite pictures have come back showing signs of
life on the other side of the wall. Survivors? Hoping to
stop another outbreak a team is sent out into the infected
area to track down a rumored cure. Once out the team is
stuck between a violent gang that rules the land and feeds
on anybody who dares enter their domain, a small group of
people who have holed themselves up in an old castle and the
government that has its own agenda. The race for mankind’s
survival is on.
Worth every bit of the 20 dollars I spent on greasy vittles!
Doomsday is a balls to the wall, action packed popcorn movie
if I have ever seen them. This movie touches all bases here.
You have a little Mad Max, a little Tupac California Lovin
and even some Pulp Fiction and Braveheart. Yes, buried deep
in here is some social commentary, but who gives a rat’s
ass. This is fun and fast. It is great to see Bob Hoskins
back in a big movie, cursing and shouting horrible British
slang no less. The outcrop of people living in the old
abandoned castle was a little hard to buy, but once the
bloodshed starts it really doesn’t matter any longer. Much
more gore type scenes than you would have expected from a
movie that was probably looking for a wider audience.
Some might claim a lack of back story, but the movie does
not take itself serious enough to need anything more than a
quick follow up. The only knock is some of the action
sequences have such rapid-fire camera work jumping back and
forth it is not always clear what happened. |
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Neil Marshall is
officially on the list. This is his third straight quality
outing. It might not live up to the heights that The Descent
hit, but it takes its shots. Rhona Mitra, even if she looks
like Kate Beckinsale, is full on hot in tight leather. Sol’s
girl is freak nasty delicious and Sol himself is the perfect
combination of over the top crazy and violent righteousness
that you want out of the leader of a band of dyed, tattooed,
and starving lunatics who follow him out of hopes for
something better. This movie has moments of heroics,
depravity, brutality, self sacrifice and fuel injected chase
scenes. |
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“..a shot of pure
action adrenaline!” |
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