Out of Darkness (2022) Poster

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5/10
Out of Patience
drake-9652510 February 2024
The movie begins interestingly enough as we are introduced to the characters. There are subtitles as the characters speak a language developed for the film and the story telling around the fire does have a good atmospheric effect, but very quickly the characters begin to distract from that atmosphere. This group of Northern Europeans from 45,000 years ago is made up of what appears to be three people of at least partial African descent, one of Middle Eastern descent and one Caucasian, all of whom have short or close cropped haircuts you'd be unsurprised to see today. The skins they wear are almost modern in their appearance and they are sewn and stitched again in what appears a very modern way. From here the movie continues to be an uneven mashup of entertaining suspense followed by confusing choices while not quite allowing the viewer to suspend disbelief. Loose ends abound from the odd black goo discovered after a major plot point, to the gory "slaughterhouse" area found all the while decrying the lack of game to hunt. It seems forced and manufactured and worst of all the villainous force at the end is comical and absurd. Also, the slaughtered mammoth that is found seems to be related to the villain, but again, that too adds to the absurdity. By the end of the movie, I was out of patience and ready to leave. Very mediocre and ok to watch for free somewhere but don't pay for it.
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6/10
Ok, but not really a horror film
stereosteve-111 October 2022
A small, hungry, group of Stone Age hipsters are hunted through a harsh landscape (the wilds of Scotland) by an unseen, seemingly supernatural, presence. More of a low-key indie survival thriller than an actual horror film, which I think it is being marketed as. In fact, if you go in expecting a horror film, you may be quite disappointed (or even want your money back). Despite the occasional bloody scene, it's a little like a horror film that's been made by and for people who don't really like horror films, but want a bit of that 'Saint Maud' action.

Grumbling about lack of 'horror' aside, the performances are fine, the cinematography, sound and costumes are excellent, and it's impressive that it was made for a low budget, out in the cold and rain, under covid restrictions. It's a good-looking, atmospheric film. If someone you knew had made it, you'd be very impressed. But compared to films that share a similar plot, like Predator, The Ritual, Valhalla Rising, Deliverance...well, it just can't compete. It lacks the tension, suspense, thrills, catharsis, tight script, and great characterisation. It's just not that engaging. That said, if you enjoy slightly arty low-budget UK indie films, you might find something to enjoy here.
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6/10
Original - but at the same time, unoriginal
euroGary10 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
45,000 years ago a small (and conspicuously multi-ethnic) group of humans arrive on the shores of a cold, wet land and determine to make it their own. But when it becomes apparent they are being spied upon - and one of their number disappears from beneath their collective noses - it seems likely whoever (or whatever) already lives there is unwelcoming.

Horror is a genre pretty much as old as cinema itself, so it must be difficult to do anything new with it: by setting their story in the far-distant past, the writers have certainly provided a new twist. But that innovation is outweighed by the predictable, which may or may not keep horror fans happy: there is the tense scene where a child goes missing but is playing a joke; there are several shots of characters being knocked to the ground in what initially seems a threatening manner but is actually a friend saving them; and the identity of the final adult survivor will surprise very few viewers. The mystery's ultimate solution does not stand more than cursory examination - and as for the moral of the story (because there is one, oh yes indeed), it is so blindingly obvious and delivered so clunkingly the viewer feels he has been battered about the head with a prehistoric stone club.

But there are several good points about the film: the menacing atmosphere is maintained mostly with sound and shadow - the threats themselves rarely appear on-screen (which, given one of them looked like a live-action Fred Flinstone, is a good thing). The made-up language in which the characters speak adds to the authenticity (although will put off viewers who do not like sub-titles). This film is worth seeing at least once.
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6/10
The Origin
CinemaSerf26 March 2023
So a group of Stone Age wanderers are searching the bleak wilderness for a new home when they begin to suspect that they are being stalked. Noises in the woods unsettle them, but they see nothing. Suddenly, though, one of their number is taken and the leader "Adem" (Chuku Modu) must make some difficult choices to ensure the survival of both his son and of his pregnant wife. The denseness of the Scottish forestry along with some creative use of light, shadow and audio goes some way to keep the film interesting but the plot itself is really weak and the actors - perfect teeth, skin, leather clothing that wouldn't look out of place at a gay pride gathering - all deprive the thing of any sense of menace or grittiness. It's difficult to watch without thinking the production caravan is just three feet out of shot! The redeeming feature may be an impressibly natural performance from Safia Oakley-Green ("Beyah") but I'm afraid for the most part, I struggled to remain engaged and the ending, well that was just rushed and a little disappointing too. I would still suggest you watch it, if you get the opportunity - but on the television is fine and don't expect to be scared.
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6/10
Demon Wendigo on the lose
This was a moody and atmospheric period survivalist, creature feature with folk horror and feminist undertones.

It was certainly thrilling and kept you on the edge of your seat, but also had a pretty slow moving pace to it. The aesthetics and shots here were pretty next level. Everything looked extraordinary and really was a pleasure to visually take in. The acting was also excellent. There's no way this was an easy movie to film with the conditions and speaking a made up language and I thought the whole cast did great.

I wish there was just one more added layer to the story. It felt like it fell just a tad short and the pay off wasn't exactly what I wanted it to be. They also relied quite heavily on jump scares which are not my favorite.

Regardless, it was still an entertaining story with multiple levels and emotions to it while being a visual feast. Would recommend.
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4/10
Underwhelming with Loose Ends
jordynnaef16 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I might've had my expectations too high going into the movie. The trailer seemed like a Stone Age Horror, but the movie took a twist I didn't expect. I wouldn't pay to watch it, but streaming it wouldn't be bad.

I left with more questions than anything. It is all subtitled, which I felt added to the atmosphere of the movie and was a good touch. It starts with a group of travelers (maybe the first Homo sapiens?) leaving to find their own land. As they get hungrier and hungrier, you seem them travel to find food and shelter. Next thing you know, some "demon" steals the leader's son, and the group goes into a manhunt trying to find the boy. This leads them to the woods that they were trying to avoid. They obviously go into the woods, and try to chase down the "demon." They come to a weird bloody pit, and then turn and run away from what they're chasing. Long story short, then get picked off until 2 remain. They trick, ambush, and unmask the "demon," and a Neanderthal human is underneath. The Neanderthal takes off running, they chase it to its cave, they get in a tussle, they kill a different Neanderthal, they find the stolen son, one of the travelers gets killed by the OG Neanderthal, the remaining traveler and son light the cave on fire and escape out the back, the OG Neanderthal follows but gets stuck at the exit, then the traveler brutally bashes in the Neanderthal's head. The som finally decides to speak up and say that the Neanderthals had initially decided to save him and help him, and is upset the traveler killed them. The traveler and child learn to survive. The end.

It could've been better, in my opinion. There are so many holes and unanswered questions. We learn the Neanderthals have a cave on the other side of the forest than where the travelers first arrive. You're telling me that the two Neanderthals just knew that a new group had arrived? Also, how did the Neanderthals completely clean up an entire mammoth carcass, leaving nothing but the skull and skin...again, on the other side of the forest? There is a weird black goo that is never explained, apparently left by the Neanderthals. The son explains they wanted to help him, but they didn't want to help the rest of the group? In fact, they outright murdered the leader in a BRUTAL way, and the old man too. But then they take care to give the pregnant lady a proper burial? Also, one of the Neanderthals grabbed the son by the fire, fully carried him across the forest, and must have ran at lightning speed because the dad was CHASING them down lol. Also, there is the weird meat pit in the forest, but the whole beginning is the travelers finding absolutely no food...so where did all the food come from? Lastly, the son legit doesn't explain a thing when he's found and lets the last traveler just absolutely bash the remaining Neanderthal. I was so confused and left wondering.

I can give props to the music, and I thought the twist was good! It went downhill after that for me. I want this remade, but with an actual demon involved...maybe like the Netflix "The Ritual," but Stone Age like.
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6/10
"There weren't things, they were like us."
AfricanBro12 February 2024
I'm glad I went into this without knowing it was supposed to be a horror film because I enjoyed it more. It felt more like a Stone Age thriller, reminiscent of "Prey (2022)." It got me thinking about how the Stone Age is underutilized in movies compared to the oversaturation of Victorian era-based films and TV shows. There's a potential for great movies set in the Stone Age beyond just animations.

I loved the campfire stories at the start, served as a pretty good character introductions. The cinematography is great and coupled with the score, I think they're the movies best qualities. I wasn't expecting there to be much to the story and it ended up being very minimalistic. The narrative in the first two acts and some of the visual aspects also reminded me of The Ritual a lot. If you watch them back to back they probably feel quite similar.

The movie had good tension. As I said it's more I thriller than it used to be horror; But you do fear for the characters and the situation they find themselves in. The creature's reveal was great, the scream afterwards when all three were looking at each other.

I don't know if we were supposed to get a moral message from the story, but I loved when the child said 'they aren't things.' The movie was very delicate in conveying that revelation and could be a lesson about not judging others out of fear and what not. But then again I the more I think about it the more I tell myself "it wasn't that deep bro." I did enjoy the movie though, might not be for everyone but if you liked Prey you'll probably like this too.
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3/10
Teasing and forgettable
rustin-22 March 2024
This movie depends on almost endless scenes of its six stone age characters running through scrubby open terrain and dark forests, with whip pans and intercut close-ups of terrified faces, to create a sense of danger and unseen horror. Trouble is, this obvious packing of the narrative with ginned-up suspense achieves nothing in terms of drama or horror. Added to that are a lot of unanswered questions about character motivation and the plausibility of the so-called demons tracking our hapless sextet. The inevitable "reveal" is both laughable and inexplicable. I truly appreciate the attempt by the filmmakers to create a low-budget feature out of spare elements and a minimalist sensibility, but at times I felt insulted that this movie expected to get away with what was clearly a woefully under-imagined scenario.
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When a movie lies in every way...
ArcadeVault1 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
The worst thing that can happen with movies, when creators totally mislead viewers with basic things, like for example GENRE.

No, not with story, with genre. I would have been so angry, if i would watch this in the cinema... lucky me, i watched this at home. But man... This is marketed as a prehistoric creature feature in the trailer, in the commercials, in the descriptions... everywhere... People will go and see it becouse they WANT a creature feature.

All will be disappointed. Becouse the movie won't reach to the people who would look for a prehistoric hunting drama. Its not that. Lies. There is no monster, dont bother if u wanted one.

But even if there is no creature, i still find the movie lacking... however, the landscapes were beautiful... thats the four star. Its very important to market a movie for the right audience, unless u want people to be disappointed in mass.
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6/10
Out of Darkness possesses worthwhile elements but falls slightly short of its potential
kevin_robbins13 February 2024
My wife and I attended a screening of the UK film 🇬🇧 Out of Darkness (2022) in theaters last night. The storyline follows a group of individuals working together during prehistoric times, seeking a new home and means of survival. Arriving in a new land with limited resources, they hunt for survival only to discover they are not the sole hunters.

Directed by Andrew Cumming in his major motion picture debut, the film stars Chuku Modu (Captain Marvel), Safia Oakley-Green (She Said), Kit Young (Shadow and Bone), Arno Lüning (Bad Girls), and Luna Mwezi (Needle Park Baby).

A well-crafted picture with a premise reminiscent of 13th Warrior, the cinematography, attire, and props authentically transport you to the era, conveying the desperation for survival and lack of hope. The characters' unity in the face of madness is palpable. While the big reveal didn't resonate with me as expected, it's a smart twist depicting evolution. The film captures a time that could well be a forgotten true story. Solid horror elements, noteworthy kills, and impressive gore contribute to the experience.

In conclusion, Out of Darkness possesses worthwhile elements but falls slightly short of its potential. I would give it a 5.5-6/10 and recommend watching it at least once.
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5/10
Visually stunning, but too slow.
Sleepin_Dragon3 March 2024
45,000 years ago, a group of people desperately try to evade a malevolent force, they must hone their survival skills to stay alive.

I watched this at The Odeon, as part of the Screen Unseen releases, I'd like to rewatch again at home, just to try and understand it a little better.

Billed to me as a horror movie, and whilst I'd say there are horror elements, please don't go expecting a horror movie, if you do, you'll be disappointed.

Whilst I wouldn't say it's my type of film, there are several positives I took away. The cinematography is quite something, it looks amazing, and the actors do a grand job, consider the language they're using, and there is a degree of tension and expectation. The music is good too, very 80's.

Sadly it just go anywhere, and the pacing for me was the major frustration, when I'm in the cinema and fidgeting, I know I'm at the wrong film.

I can't really go much higher than a five, as it committed the biggest film sin of all, it was boring, but it's not without merit.

5/10.
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8/10
Exceeded all expectations
mariusarmangue15 October 2022
I just saw The Origin at Sitges Film Festival 2022, and I'm so happy I chose to watch this movie.

Without getting into the slightest spoiler, the film takes place thousands of years ago, which makes makeup and costume designs incredibly important. Luckily everything looks great (aside perhaps from a haircut or two, but I'll let it slide, hence I'm no expert on the subject) and the acting is equally impressive. The actors all speak a makeup language, made solely for the film, and they still manage to come off convincing. The script is great - there's a few scenes we've seen in other film of the same genre, that being survival thriller/horror, but the film manages to stand on its own feet for the vast majority of the movie. The locations are beautiful and the camerawork is simply stunning. There's also a great core-message underneath and several thematics throughout the film.

Surprisingly for this type of film, the pacing is good for the entirety of the movie, and my only gripe is that there is a few cliches along the way as well as a message that regardless of importance is a bit too explicit towards the end.

8/10.
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6/10
Entertaining, but Ultimately Falls Flat
nebula00246 March 2024
Out of Darkness is a film about a group of misfits from mixed tribes who have chosen to traverse barren lands in search of a new home. Adem, their "leader", seems to lack any true leadership skills and is quick to anger when questioned or basically hits a roadblock of any kind. Geirr, who seems to be second and a hunter, tries to portray himself as brave but is actually quite cowardly, has no sense of direction, and lacks the mental fortitude needed for survival. There is Ave, who is pregnant, Odal, the old fool who thinks himself wise, Beyah who is young and inexperienced (though probably the strongest of the bunch mentally), and Heron who is basically a throw-away character.

To sum up the group, they are all woefully ill-prepared in every way imaginable. In particular, they all seem to have no idea how to protect themselves and the group. They constantly leave themselves open to attack, and on multiple occasions individuals leave the group while under threat, going out on their own in the dead of night. In the woods, they leave their backs exposed to the darkness while by the fire, instead of sitting back-to-back with weapons drawn outward. Heck, not a single one of them even thought of climbing a tree (yes, it's possible to climb trees with no low-hanging branches). Given this takes place tens of thousands of years ago, each of them should have learned these basic skills as children. So I suppose that goes well with the idea these are misfits and were never a cohesive part of their original tribes.

The writers and film makers certainly have done an excellent job here portraying a fractured group lacking even the most basic skills necessary for survival. One thing that fell hilariously flat on its face was the "lesson" the writers were trying to portray at the end of the film. Without spoiling anything here, the justifications that were given didn't align with the reality of the situation or the events that came before. The "moral of the story" didn't really make sense and just seemed shoe-horned in there because someone wanted it to be that way.

In terms of cinematography, this was probably the strongest attribute the film had to offer. There were also a number of film techniques I quite liked. For example, when the camera pans or tracks away, it smoothly transitions into another shot without the viewer even realizing it. Colors were pretty bleak, but I suppose that matched the tone and desolation they were going for.

All-in-all, I think the film is probably a 6/10. Unfortunately I don't think it quite came together the way it could have, but if you've got some time to blow then it's probably worth a watch.
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3/10
If you're having trouble sleeping, watch this
FeastMode30 January 2024
I watched Out of Darkness "early" as part of AMC's Screen Unseen. I put early in quotes because apparently this is a 2022 movie that took two years to reach theaters. I can see why. It doesn't belong in theaters. It belongs in the endless abyss of underwhelming and unmemorable streaming movies.

This movie has very little substance. Not much happens. I can summarize the entire thing in a few short sentences. The story is not engaging. You barely learn anything about the characters. So you don't care about them or understand their decisions.

They spend the entire movie teasing you until a fully underwhelming and generic "payoff." It made me roll my eyes. And it has a message we've seen a million times before, but executed in a clunky fashion.

(1 viewing, early screening Screen Unseen 1/29/2024)
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7/10
Surprisingly gripping film about Stone Age humans.
RMurray84712 February 2024
How do you breathe new life into a really over-done horror concept: a group of humans, often with competing priorities and loyalties, is thrust into a situation where a monster or supernatural force or "something" is after them and slowly picking them off (often brutally)? Whether handled in a deeply serious manner (ALIEN, THE GREY, THE DESCENT) or in a campy manner (DEEP BLUE SEA), this basic concept is so baked into the DNA of cinema and is adjacent to the slasher film, where the group may not literally be together all the time (NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET), but are picked off one by one. I separate the two in my head because some of the tropes are a bit different.

Anyway, these films can be fun, but are rarely terribly original anymore. A good director and a decent script can still wring a lot of entertainment for the setup, but still... So what a delight when a film like OUT OF DARKNESS comes along. It's set, very convincingly, in the STONE AGE!! Right there, I was interested. But in viewing the film, I discovered I had set my expectations too low. This is a pretty solid film!

We meet six Stone Age humans as they are arriving in a new land, having fled their earlier hunting grounds because the usual herd they preyed on was not to be found. While we don't know where they've landed in the story, the film was made in the Scottish Highlands. And they obviously found the bleakest, most windswept part of that beautiful area of the world, because you can sure see on the faces of these 6 desperate people that they don't see a lot of hope in the new land. Forbidding mountains surrounding valleys of relentless scrubby grasses and NO animals. Even the forest they come across is forbidding and bereft of life. No birds, even. They've clearly gone from a difficult land to a completely blighted one.

The leader of this group, Adem, and his brother Geirr, go on a scouting trip and discovered the completely (but recently) picked-over remains of a mammoth. Rather than rejoicing that mammoths are in the area; they are full of mis-givings. How did the animal die? Who picked it clean? Clearly, there is someone or something in the area...is it watching them? Even stalking them?

If you know this is a horror movie, you know it's likely to be stalking and not just watching. As these 6 huddle around their sad fire at night, surrounded by utter darkness, we can feel their fear and vulnerability. They know they are easy targets, yet they have nowhere to hide and no great place to run. So in their fear, they begin to bicker with each other, stirring up resentments and passions and superstitions that have them making some grave errors. When Adem's son Heron is snatched by whatever monster is stalking them, the group springs into action...but not the kind of action where cooler heads prevail. Adem rages impotently and wrecklessly. His brother, the reserved (cowardly?) Geirr is torn between loyalty to his brother and an interest in a young "stray" the group has picked up named Beyah, who knows how precarious her place in this group is. Adem's mate Ave, who is pregnant, knows her value to Adem is purely that she might bear him a child, and she sees that Adem is already telling Beyah that if Ave dies in childbirth, he will be her next choice. And if Ave doesn't die...well, there may just not be any use for Beyah afterall. The elderly Odal is the most superstitious of the bunch, speaking of the need to appease the monsters with sacrifices. It's a brew for internal discontent. So we have a great mix of deeply personal politics and a frightening, unseen monster stalking the group.

Director Andrew Cumming, working with a script he co-wrote with Ruth Greenberg and Oliver Kassman, does several crucial things really well. He quickly gives us the backstory we need for these characters, but not one bit more than is needed to create the context for the story we're witnessing. He establishes the characters, their ties, their motives and their fears very neatly, and his cast of relative unknowns rises to the task as well. Each actor must give a deeply physical performance, but must also juggle a language that was created for them. And as I said, the details of the lives of Stone Age humans are very convincingly rendered. I don't know what an anthropologist would say, but certainly I felt very immersed in this world.

So why not give the film a perfect score? I would say that the actual horror elements are handled less well. The action sequences are too dark and disjointed. While the mood is fabulously well established, and a sense of doom presides over everything...when IT hits the fan, I wasn't properly jolted. And, despite a brief run time, there are at least two or three minutes that could have been cut. There was perhaps just a bit too much of them trekking around their landscape. The bleakness had long since been established; it started to feel like filler.

Seeing OUT OF DARKNESS, I realized that I want to see a movie about the very difficult lives of Stone Age people. The contrasts (and similarities) between how they lived and how we live were very interesting. (I know we don't know all these details about folks from 45,000 years ago, but the film speculates very convincingly. These are humans who are really just starting to distinguish themselves from animals.)

OUT OF DARKNESS, when I think back on it in years to come, will be less of a horror movie and more of a movie that takes old clichés and imbues them with new life by giving us a group of characters we've really not seen before. (I look forward to a physical media release that includes lots of good "making-of" stuff. The movie was very low budget, but clearly made with great care.)
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3/10
What a disappointment...
paul_haakonsen1 March 2024
Now, I had never heard about this 2022 movie titled "Out Of Darkness" prior to sitting down to watch it. But I have to admit that the movie's cover and the movie's synopsis definitely was interesting enough to make me stop and take notice.

And without knowing what I was getting myself into, then director Andrew Cumming had every opportunity to impress and entertain me with "Out Of Darkness".

The storyline, as written by Ruth Greenberg, Andrew Cumming and Oliver Kassman, proved to be somewhat bland and stale. There wasn't really a whole lot going on, and most of the movie was just the audience watching the group of people stumbling around the hostile environment, mostly in the dark, trying not to wet themselves because of the sounds of some unseen creature lurking about in the darkness. Or watching them stumble about the forest in the daytime. This might have worked well for a horror movie in the 1980s, but not so much in 2022.

I found the narrative in the movie to be a swing and a miss, and it was definitely a movie that was progressively getting more and more difficult to keep an interest in watching.

While I was not familiar with any of the members of the cast, I have to say that it definitely was something I liked about the movie. Just a shame that the cast had to little to work with in terms of script, storyline, characters and narrative.

Something which I did like about "Out of Darkness", was the language that they used in the movie. It added a nice touch to the atmosphere of the overall impression.

This is not a movie that I would recommend you to rush out and get to watch. The movie had a promising synopsis, sure, but director Andrew Cumming just didn't deliver an outstanding movie here. And I can in all honesty say that I am never returning to watch "Out of Darkness" a second time.

My rating of "Out of Darkness" lands on a three out of ten stars.
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6/10
Good ideas but not quite there
dbledown31111 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I was in the dark (no pun intended) about this movie. Never saw a trailer, only read the synopsis. I was intrigued. We get a brief history of our characters and where they came from at the beginning but that's about it. He cinematography was really good. The vast shots of the landscapes were beautiful. Paired with a great soundtrack it gave us the atmosphere for the world. But the heart of the movie was lacking....the characters. They were kind predictable and you kind of knew what was going to happen to each one. I didn't care for them as they were being picked off one at a time. The character story of the stray girl seemed very similar to the movie Prey (which I really disliked). We knew very little about her but all of a sudden she's the best hunter out of all of them? The other young male was terrible. Made every wrong decision and you end up hating him because....well....he sucks. The reveal of demon/monster that was tracking them could have been cool in a different movie. These were neanderthals which apparently existed with humans for a short time. So I liked the idea of them both existing and being paranoid and afraid of each other but it just didn't work in this movie. For the things that were happening (giant bone yards being found, kids being abducted, them having super strength) it would have made sense for a mythical beast or something to be there but I think everyone was let down because it didn't seem plausible.

I'd recommend seeing the movie, it's not a bad movie at all but I think people were disappointed because it had such good potential and fell short.
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1/10
All that was missing were mountain bikes
meteroid5 March 2023
Warning: Spoilers
On the face of it, this story is about a well-groomed group of middle eastern tourists who get lost in a modern Scottish Scandinavian-pine forest and are hunted by Robin from Ghosts.

The level of personal grooming - fashionable stubble and clipper cuts for the menfolk, hipster mullets for the womenfolk and pristine dentistry - for 45,000 y.a. Is staggering.

Most of the landscape is clear of the dense forests that would have been typical at that time and when there is a forest, it's - yes - modern Scandinavian-pine with all the many ancient metres of undergrowth cleared out and nice equally-spaced Forestry Commission plantations. All that is missing here is a passing mountain bike.

A lot of time spent on the bespoke language, which I guess in theory could be middle-eastern sounding. But not as much time as has been spent on the tailored trousers and skin care.

Piercings, jewellery and tattooing of the time is missing, along with any original plot.

Also very boring and predictable scenes and story. Not scary.
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7/10
Cavemen!!!
stikyman12330 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Basically what happens when Neanderthals meet Homo Sapiens? Could it be a @#$% fest or do they kill eachother. I was not expecting the premise of this movie, it was a good movie glad I didn't spend any money on this but definitely didn't expect to read subtitles throughout the whole movie. But the actors are a bunch of new actors I have never heard of before. But this is a really great movie if you have nothing else better to do or on a rainy day, entertaining, I can't really think of anything else to say beside it reminded me a lot like The Quest for Fire with Rae Dawn Chong, or Clan of the Cavebear.
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2/10
Bait and switch
penguin-6514 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Billed as a horror film, with the preview suggesting a haunted forest type of story. That is NOT what you'll find here

It's extremely low budget but I'm not downgrading for that. In general they had all the pieces for a fine movie.

I do downgrade when characters do things that are stupid and unbelievable, and fully 25% of the small cast do unbelievable things with every action they take.

Begin mild spoilers

A group of six separate from a larger group when food gets scarce, and go over seas allegedly looking for original home of one of the group. They land in Scotland, find no crops and no hunting and decide to stay.

They encounter an apex predator and get really certain they want to stay.

I haven't even gotten to the unbelievable stuff. And I won't, as I don't want to do major spoilers

Kudos are necessary though to the linguist. Taking the dialogue and translating it to an artificial language was very slick and made the cornerstone if what could have been a brilliant movie.
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8/10
Ice cold in the ice age
stephenmsaunders10 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
This is a genuinely great film, which sets it apart from much of what is being released currently, obviously.

The production is totally focused on delivering an immersive experience for the audience - and it succeeds.

The cast is superb, all the better for not featuring any recognizable "Hollywood" faces, which adds to the feeling of realism.

The music score is absolute genius - a succession of not-really-music music that delivers just the right accompaniment to the action and suspense.

The first two thirds of the film are perfection. Things start to unwind a little in the last third after a big reveal - but it's still great.

An ice cold ice age thrill ride.
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7/10
The Original Final Girl
dvgrig30 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
"Out of Darkness" proved to be an unexpected gem, discovered during AMC's Scream Unseen event. From the moment the film commenced, it captivated my senses, sustaining a palpable tension that coursed through every scene. As the narrative unfolded, it skillfully withheld the revelation of the lurking menace, allowing suspense to seep into the very fabric of the story.

This film transcends the boundaries of conventional storytelling, delving deep into the intricacies of human nature. Themes of trust, understanding, and primal fear interweave seamlessly, inviting viewers on a gripping journey through shadows and uncertainty. With each passing moment, the darkness becomes more than just a setting; it becomes a metaphor for the enigmatic depths of the human psyche.

What sets "Out of Darkness" apart is its subversion of expectations. Initially presenting a facade of external threat, the film ingeniously peels back the layers to reveal that the true monsters lie within ourselves. Through its compelling narrative and thought-provoking revelations, "Out of Darkness" emerges not only as a thriller but as a profound exploration of the human condition.
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1/10
Dumbest movie ever
Salmar7015 February 2024
People save your money and your time. This was the stupidest movie. Both my husband and I looked at each other and said, "That's it?" We kept hoping for more. First off the characters don't even look like they belong in that "era". The dialog and acting is terrible. These people are supposed to be an ancient civilization but the coats they're wearing look modern? The production value looks low and...what more can I say to fill out the six hundred characters? It's so bad I have nothing else to say. Do not waste your time. It's not even good enough for tv. I don't know how this got to theatres. I don't know.
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7/10
Comes the light
aquamanian9 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Raw. That's what this movie was. Set in the paleolithic we follow a band of travellers. They search for a better life. And who can blame them? But tragedy befalls the group when one member is killed. Or so they think. Some reviews say the characters lack depth or a real arc of development but there are real defined individuals here with dynamic traits. The lead male perishes first, a victim of his own overly aggressive pursuit. Brutality follows. Sometimes you just have to eat. How often did our ancestors dine on human flesh? Perhaps it was common place when the situation was dire. I have no difficulty believing that when different groups and tribes met it was often a bloodbath. Different forms of humans would likely see the other as yet another form of food. If not that then as another form of reproductive potential. Are we to believe the first child was abducted for noble reasons? To save it from a failing starving clan? Or did they have ulterior motives? The desolation, complex group dynamics, commentary on ethnocentric violence and homage to a mostly ignored part of human history all make this a film worth seeing. But by the end who do you root for? The child wishes to stay with his abductors.
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7/10
Solid low-budget nailbiter to stir your imagination
nhtrvdzvb11 February 2024
What I really took away from this movie is the problems humanity has had to solve to make it to where we are, and the ways in which those problems still present conflict. Shared language and other means of communication have allowed us to cooperate as a species. Our deep fears of abandonment and of the unknown glue us together, albeit sometimes to those that don't have our best interest at heart. This film is a great parable explaining our species in many ways. We've been around 300,000 years and there ought to be many more stories like this. If you want an immersive, suspenseful film a la The Witch, Annihilation, or Mandy, this one's for you. 7/10.
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