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Run time:
85 min.
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USA
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Language:
English
Brief Summary:
A squadron of trained gunmen lay siege to a supermarket at closing time. What first appears to be a robbery soon takes on other worldly dimensions. Full Description: It's the end of yet another night at Hastings Supermarket, an idyllic family grocery store in Buck Lake, Arizona. But the normal closing-time monotony is broken when a group of masked and armed-to-the-teeth militants invade the store, immediately killing several of the employees and shoppers and holding the rest hostage. Though the hostage-takers at first appear to be robbers or terrorists, they reveal themselves to be a cadre of rogue scientists that have discovered and tracked an alien infestation to THIS STORE on THIS NIGHT, and they are determined to find out which of the survivors are extraterrestrials and end the invasion at any cost. ALIEN RAIDERS is a throwback to what we consider the golden age of creature features, the 1980's. This one falls somewhere between the seriousness level of THE THING or TREMORS. Nostalgic without being stale, ALIEN RAIDERS draws strong performances from a young ensemble cast composed of mostly working character actors that you've seen in a million small parts. You might recognize the monster hunting team: Carlos Bernard from his recurring role as Tony Almeida on "24" and Matthew St. Patrick who played Keith Charles on SIX FEET UNDER. The plot explores what happens when you have one of those MEN IN BLACK jobs that you can't really explain to people. When you start invading public spaces to blow shit up, the bystanders naturally think that you're the bad guy, and there's not a lot you can do to convince them otherwise. So you don't bother, and you do your job and damn the consequences. But sometimes those bystanders can b e pretty tough and wily, and some of them ARE the monsters. But which? For a modern alien creature movie, the filmmakers refreshingly rely on practical effects for the punctuations of gore. The carnage happens in the blink of an eye by a monster that you only see in glimpses. This serves to heighten the tension, as you experience the uncertainty of the hostages, who aren't quite sure what just happened, but it's very very bad. You can see them weighing in their minds the present danger of these masked terrorists who are "testing/torturing" them against the mysterious glimpses of a threat that they don't understand. (Karrie League) Director Ben Rock will be live in person to present the film. Check out the trailer here. |
2 pictures
film details
screenings
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Alamo S. Lamar 2 | + add to cal | |
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Alamo S. Lamar 1 | + add to cal |
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Cast & Crew
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Audience Buzz
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11:03 AM
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This is the kind of solid B-movie that the Sci-Fi Channel *wishes* it could be producing for its Saturday slate. It reminds me of a comment I once heard about the great "Tremors"--it doesn't try to be any smarter than it has to be. It knows it's a B-flick and it excels within those parameters. I do have a minor quibble in that the cops seemed WAY to blase about the 9,000 rounds of small-arms fire going on during the apparent hostage situation. You'd think they would've rushed the place eventually. Also, the movie sags a little bit in the final 15 minutes, and the ending is not altogther a major surprise. With that aside, though, this is a very well-done movie with a capable cast that plays it straight-up. For you gamers out there, I make this one out to be a "Hunter: The Reckoning" scenario (in much the same way that the TV series "Supernatural" is an ongoing Hunter campaign).
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