Aftermath (2012 American film)

Aftermath
Directed by Peter Engert
Written by Christian McDonald
Starring C.J. Thomason
Monica Keena
Edward Furlong
Music by Austin Wintory
Cinematography Scott Winig
Edited by Nathan Bezner
Nikki Winig
Production
companies
Eastlake Films
LightWave Entertainment
Distributed by Image Entertainment
Release dates
2012
Running time
92 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Aftermath, also known under its working title of Remnants, is a 2012 apocalyptic thriller film that was directed by Peter Engert. The film stars C.J. Thomason, Monica Keena, and Edward Furlong as a group of survivors taking shelter in a Texas farmhouse.[1]

Synopsis

Hunter (C. J. Thomason) is a young doctor that has found himself stuck in the cellar of a farmhouse while World War III and the resulting nuclear attack unfolds around them. He's accompanied by eight other people, none of whom know one another. Terrified and forced to defend themselves against other refugees looking to use the cellar as their own shelter, the group is frequently at odds with one another.

As the film opens, Hunter meets a young woman named Jennifer and her brother Satchel, driving down the road where they witness several mushroom clouds from afar, destroying two major cities in the process.

Satchel goes blind after watching the explosions. They start looking for supplies at a nearby drugstore, grabbing whatever they could find: food, water, medical supplies, car batteries, etc. They pick up a young woman named Elizabeth who informs them of the devastation of every major city on the east and west coast. Hunter gets shot while trying to find shelter for the others. They find a supposedly abandoned farmhouse, where they hope will be a safe refuge. However, he turns the tables on a farmer named Brad, who threatened to kill him if he didn't leave.

Jonathan, another farmer, decides to help Hunter and the others. Before joining the others, Hunter tends to his gunshot wound, finds medicine, and arms Elizabeth with a shotgun. Everyone begins to wonder whether or not the radiation in the atmosphere is widespread. They receive more news about Europe being destroyed by nuclear bombs. Hunter builds a makeshift radio, where they hope will bring them good news. However, they find a Geiger counter, and use it to measure the fallout of the bombs, causing shock and disbelief among the survivors.

Hunter and the others try to make it to the outside, but Elizabeth and Angie, Brad's wife, become exposed to the radiation, fearing that they might have sickness. Angie realizes that her unborn child may have died because of the exposure. Wendell, Jonathan and Brad's great uncle, dies after he refused to drink and eat anything that is contaminated. Rob, another survivor, promises Jonathan that he will help bury Wendell. Jonathan and the others have an encounter with cannibalistic humans who try to kill the group for food.

After heading back into the basement, Angie has a miscarriage. Without a blood transfusion, Angie could die. Jonathan hits her with a shovel, allowing her to die peacefully without her child growing up in a dead world. Brad and the others hear the President's Speech, knowing that he has either died of the exposure or that he is in a secure bunker somewhere. All of them realize that there is no help coming. An hour later, Satchel dies from pneumonia. Hunter begins to notice that most of the group are slowly slipping away, because of the radiation seeping through the basement walls.

Hunter, armed with a shotgun, helps bury Satchel with Rob. Rob's fate is revealed that he was killed by the cannibals. Elizabeth proposes that they should kill themselves to put each other out of their misery. However, it is up to Brad to decide who lives and who dies. The next day, Brad and Hunter hear footsteps upstairs and know that the cannibals have returned, forcing the group to fight back. The five of them notice that the cannibals are ready for another fight. Elizabeth suffers and eventually succumbs to a broken rib and punctured lung after fighting with one of them. Hunter kills the cannibal that hurt her, but Brad dies in the process. Jonathan, having gone insane because of the experience, shoots Jennifer and then himself (It is later revealed that Jennifer survived the gunshot). The film ends with Hunter and Jennifer as the sole survivors of the group. A few weeks later, both are rapidly suffering the effects of radiation exposure and are shown to be close to death, while continuing to drink from contaminated water.

Cast

Production

Engert was the second director hired to direct Aftermath and he was brought on to the project four days before principal photography commenced.[2] He stated that he chose to work on Aftermath due to the film's script, which he felt "focused on the characters a lot more than the situation they’re in" and because the script did not require a large special effects budget or an overly large cast.[2] The total production took place over a four-week period.[2]

Reception

Critical reception for Aftermath has been mixed and the film currently holds a rating of 47% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 17 reviews.[3] The Los Angeles Times and HorrorNews.net both gave mostly favorable reviews for the movie and the Los Angeles Times wrote that "Even if this largely contained movie remains more low key than frantic, it features enough well-executed bursts of tension and strong emotional beats to hold interest."[4][5] Variety and Bloody Disgusting were more mixed in their reviews, with Bloody Disgusting noting "Aftermath strives to be different from what you’d normally get with a post-nuclear film. And while the bleakness and pessimistic outlook does change things up, it doesn’t deviate from the formula we’ve all seen before."[6][7] The New York Times panned Aftermath, negatively comparing it to the 2012 film The Divide and commenting that several of the characters were uninteresting to the reviewer.[8]

References

  1. Venable, Nick. "Aftermath Trailer Survives A Nuclear Attack With Edward Furlong". Giant Freakin Robot. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 "Interview: Director Peter Engert (Aftermath)". HorrorNews.net. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  3. "AFTERMATH (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  4. Goldstein, Gary. "Review: Well-told 'Aftermath' unfolds as yet another apocalypse". LA Times. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  5. "Film Review: Aftermath (2012)". HorrorNews.net. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  6. Chang, Justin. "Film Review: 'Aftermath'". Variety. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  7. Torfe, Pat. "[Review] 'Aftermath' Is Bleak, But Also Lacking". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  8. CATSOULIS, JEANNETTE. "It's All Over, but the Dying". NY Times. Retrieved 20 December 2014.

External links

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