Prey
Review
by Anthony Morris
|

|
Natalie Bassingthwaighte in that infamous shower scene |
It wouldn't be fair to call Prey the worst Australian film of the year.
Not
because the year isn't even half over (honestly, there is zero chance
of a worse film coming along) but because despite it's many, many,
many, many flaws - it does gets one thing right: it's not boring.
Sure, part of the reason why it isn't
brain-bustingly-snoreworthy is because when you lose interest in the
rubbish dialogue, appalling acting and nonsensical plot... you can at
least keep an eye out for some of the amazingly obvious bloopers
scattered throughout this cheaply made car crash.
But that takes
nothing away from the fact that this roughly 75 minute long film (not
counting the classic 80s horror movie trailers that were shown at the
screening I attended) has just enough going on to keep you watching
until the laughable final twist.
So what is it about?
Buggered if I know - and I just watched it.
Various
behind the scenes dramas (including the removal of the director)
mean that this film most likely would have made very little sense even
before the producers were forced to remove all culturally insensitive
references to an Aboriginal curse.
So we are left with
roughly half a story: a bunch of mildly attractive non-actors decide to
drive out into the bush, only to get lost after buying a road map from
Nicolas Bell (Bad Eggs, Newstopia, The Games –
none of which were as funny on purpose as this is by accident) and
ending up near some mystical sandpit on a soundstage where giant snakes
turn people into flaming zombies or something.
People
promptly die, but not in an overly gory way despite someone being
crushed under a car, someone else's head exploding after being bitten
by a zillion snakes and someone wandering off in a sandstorm and later
being found with his back missing.
Then someone gets
their pointy new age crystal shoved through their chest and the
survivors start chainsawing up the corpses to stop them coming back as
zombies.
Oh, and they drive around for a while but can't
seem to escape the soundstage, which only becomes a problem when they
decide to leave one of their three cars behind (not having enough
living bodies to fill three cars anymore) only for us to then be shown
footage of the same three cars driving around trying to get out.
Whoops.
Fortunately
there is the dodgiest lesbian hand massage / seduction scene ever put
on bad digital video to keep the laughs coming, not to mention a
pointless (read: clothes on) shower scene that takes place after four
people have died in the exact same location as the shower.
Which, if nothing else, shows an admirable commitment to good hygiene.
The
ending makes no sense at all and presumably was filmed without a
script, as it involves a previously evil-seeming ghost turning up to
provide useful advice and save the day… or maybe it was bad advice and
everyone goes to Hell.
It is honestly impossible to tell at this stage of Prey, as clearly even the supernatural forces just want this film to end.
It
seems to have become a rule that if you want to make money in
Australian film you make a horror movie, because no matter how rubbish
it is you can always find some chumps who will pay to go see it.
Prey puts that theory to a test more rigorous and extensive than anyone could have previously suspected possible.
But hey, so long as there is badly re-dubbed swear free dialogue to look out for, you will never be bored. 1 out
of 5
Prey
Australian release: Limited Release Only from May,
2009
Official
Site: Prey
Cast: Natalie Bassingthwaighte, Jesse Johnson, Nicholas Bell
Director: Oscar d' Roccster
|