The Signal (2007 film)

This article is about the 2007 film. For the article about the 2014 film of the same name, see The Signal (2014 film). For other uses, see The Signal.
The Signal
Directed by David Bruckner
Dan Bush
Jacob Gentry
Produced by Alexander A. Motlagh
Written by David Bruckner
Dan Bush
Jacob Gentry
Starring A. J. Bowen
Anessa Ramsey
Justin Welborn
Music by Ben Lovett
Distributed by Magnolia Pictures
Release dates
  • January 22, 2007 (2007-01-22) (Sundance Film Festival)
  • February 22, 2008 (2008-02-22) (United States)
Running time
103 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $50,000[1]
Box office $401,462[2]

The Signal is an American horror film written and directed by independent filmmakers David Bruckner, Dan Bush and Jacob Gentry. It is told in three parts, in which all telecommunication and audiovisual devices transmit only a mysterious signal turning people mad and activating murderous behaviour in many of those affected.

The film's three interconnected chapters ("transmissions") are presented in a nonlinear narrative. Each of them manifests elements of (besides the overall genre of psychological horror), respectively, splatter film, black comedy, and a post-apocalyptic love story. The Signal was met with a mixed but largely positive critical reception.

Plot

The film opens, showing that Mya is cheating on her husband Lewis with a man named Ben. Ben attempts to convince Mya to leave the city with him, but she remains noncommittal. As Mya exits, Ben turns the television on and watches a bizarre, psychedelic sequence of images. Mya begins to listen to a compact disc given to her by Ben, but she is menaced by men who are acting strangely in a parking garage. When she reaches her apartment building, she finds more people behaving strangely. Unknown to Mya, the Signal, a static-like interference that is coming through the television, radio and telephone amplifies each person's negative emotional traits, causing them to act irrationally and, in most cases, violently.

Transmission 1: Crazy in Love

Written and directed by David Bruckner.

Once inside her apartment, Lewis and two friends, Jerry and Rod attempt to fix the TV, but Lewis, the first to react to the Signal, beats Jerry to death with a baseball bat over a minor argument. Mya flees in panic, leaving Rod and Lewis in a struggle, but finds the whole building in chaos with people killing each other. Mya hides out in the nearby apartment until morning. When she decides to leave and re-enter her home, she finds an unconscious Lewis, bound to a chair with duct-tape. He awakens only to see her leave him behind and exit into the hall listening to Ben's compact disc, but encounters Rod who drags her into a janitor's closet. He then tells her of the night he spent trying to survive in the apartment complex. It becomes evident that the Signal affects each person differently, and that there is the possibility that Rod is also crazy, though he seems to largely have control of his own judgment. Together, they escape, and attempt to drive to safety. But after being shot by a policewoman and almost left behind by Mya, Rod becomes even more violent and attacks Mya, who crashes the car. Rod is incapacitated and trapped in the vehicle, while Mya flees, telling a stranger named Clark that she is going to the train station.

Transmission 2: The Jealousy Monster

Written and directed by Jacob Gentry.

The story turns to Ben, who finds the duct-taped Lewis and loosens his bonds. Lewis knocks Ben unconscious and puts his body in the back of a pest control van. At a nearby apartment, a woman named Anna is setting up for a New Year party. The Signal has affected her so that her dutifulness as a homemaker is amplified (though she is also quite possibly made psychologically unstable from being forced to kill her own husband), and despite having killed her crazed husband in self-defense, she has continued planning for the party as if nothing has happened. Clark, who is her neighbor, and a conspiracy theorist, soon arrives. The two begin attempting to figure out what is happening, and Clark also admits that he has decapitated Rod with a shovel, when Rod attacked him after being freed from the car wreck. Eventually Lewis makes his way to the apartment, under the mistaken belief that Mya has been there, because her car is crashed outside. At first, Lewis befriends Anna and Clark, and they convince themselves that none of them have been affected by the Signal, and that they have to band together in order to survive. Lewis, whose violent and paranoid tendencies are clearly amplified by the Signal, kills Anna's niece, Laura, who arrives at the door seeking help, under the mistaken belief that she is attacking Anna with a knife. He dismisses the act as defense on the part of Anna, but Clark convinces him not to attack the next arrival, Jim, who is apparently oblivious of the situation. While Anna hallucinates that Clark is her husband, Lewis hallucinates that Jim is Ben, taunting him. He beats Jim to death, restrains Clark in a chair by staking his arms to the chair with kitchen knives, then attacks Anna, spraying her with insecticide until she is blind. Once he realizes she knows nothing about Mya's whereabouts, Lewis forces her to ingest the poison, apparently killing her. He then exposes Clark to the Signal in order to convince him to tell him where Mya had gone. Ben, having woken up and freed himself from Lewis's van, enters the apartment and attacks Lewis with the pesticide canister, knocking him out.

Transmission 3: Escape from Terminus

Written and directed by Dan Bush.

Lewis wakes up and follows Ben and Clark. He attempts to kill them in a tool shed, but they fight him off and escape. After Ben convinces Clark that the Signal is a lie, thus breaking its effect on him, Clark informs Ben where Mya was headed. Ben and Clark make a run through the now mostly-dead city and arrive at the train station. There, they find Mya tied to a chair, being forced to watch the Signal by Lewis, who attacks them and strangles Clark until he is unconscious. Ben then resorts to using Lewis's own paranoia against him, eventually tricking Lewis into believing that their roles are reversed, and that Lewis is the one man he hates most: Mya's lover. Lewis punches a signal-broadcasting TV, in a frustrated rage, electrocuting himself.

The story ends ambiguously. A series of scenes showing Ben and Mya with Clark, stocking up on supplies, then Ben and Mya going separate ways from Clark, suggesting they have succeeded. However, the next scene reveals Mya still tied to the chair, seemingly catatonic due to her prolonged exposure to the Signal. Ben places Mya's headphones on her, and she closes her eyes, a tear rolling down her cheek, before the credits appear. Whether this is the final reality, or a flashback before Ben and Mya's escape from the city, is left for the viewer to decide.

Cast

Production and release

The Signal was created by four filmmakers who have been collaborating since 1999 in Atlanta, Georgia and each of its chapters of which had different directors during shooting. The film was completed for the 2007 Sundance Film Festival on a budget of only $50,000 and shot over the course of 13 days.[3] The film premiered January 22, 2007 at the Sundance Film Festival, where it was acquired by Magnolia Pictures,[4] and released on DVD and Blu-ray on June 10, 2008.[5]

After long delay due to the search for a song to replace an unlicensed cover of Lou Reed's "Perfect Day" by Jon Thomas Hall in the soundtrack, the film was theatrically released on February 22, 2008.[6] The song finally used is a cover of Joy Division's "Atmosphere" by Ola Podrida. As a promotion for the film, a new short podcast was released bi-weekly through a horror film news site Bloody Disgusting.[7] On February 23, 2008, it was reported that two men were stabbed by a stranger in a Fullerton, California movie theatre during a showing of The Signal; one of them suffered non life-threatening injuries to his arm, while the other suffered a lung puncture.[8]

The home media release includes an audio commentary from the directors, deleted scenes, the making-of featurette, the complete short film The Hap Hapgood Story that was shown on TV in the introduction sequence of The Signal, as well as three short (each around four-minute long) additional "transmissions" featuring entirely different new characters and locations ("Transmission 14: Technical Difficulties", "Transmission 23: The Return", and "Transmission 37: Crosstown Traffic" by Jacob Gentry).[5][9][10] Gentry, who also directed the second part of the film, shared his bonus featurette on Vimeo.[11]

Reception

Not content to go the usual "zombie apocalypse" route (where the narrative follows a band of survivors coping with hordes of crazies), the creative triptych have broached larger, more philosophical ideas. (...) It's chilling because there are no simple "heroes and villains" on these terms, not even "Us vs. Them." If psychosis and paranoia were communicable in this manner, "Them" could be "Us," and we would have absolutely no way of knowing.[12]

–Aaron Gillot, Filmmaker

The Signal received 57% positive reviews at Rotten Tomatoes, with the website's consensus stating that the film "is gruesome, funny, and has big thoughts about society, but those disparate elements fail to come together convincingly."[13] Its average rating at Metacritic is 63/100 (generally favorable reviews).[14] In 2012, Total Film included it on their list of the best independent horror films, noting that if The Signal had a bigger budget "it would have had more room to explore its big ideas."[15]

In a review for The Boston Globe, Wesley Morris wrote that while the film's episodes vary in their quality (he opined that the first is "by far the most impressive"), "the filmmaking stays sharp and the acting maintains its ferocity."[16] On the other hand, Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly called it a poor mix of Poltergeist, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Re-Animator, Shivers and Shaun of the Dead.[17]

Karen Kemmerle of Tribeca Film recommended this "surreal, primal, unexpected and unsettling journey through a society gone mad", and stated that "the style of the film is reminiscent of those great 70s horror movies—it's raw, grainy and insanely visceral," and its raw and low budget feel "only draws to its appeal."[18] According to Aaron Gillot of Filmmaker, "for such a modest movie ... The Signal is creative, intelligent, and one of the few movies that truly immerses the viewer in the terror of madness. Any fan of horror should seek it out.[12]

See also

References

  1. Mark Hughes (October 30, 2013). "The Top Ten Best Low-Budget Horror Movies Of All Time". Forbes. Retrieved December 27, 2014.
  2. "The Signal – Box Office Data, Movie News, Cast Information". The-numbers.com. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  3. CinemATL Magazine – Cover Story: POPfilms
  4. Talk of the Nation (2007-01-25). "'The Signal' Director Describes Success at Sundance". NPR. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  5. 1 2 "The Signal (Blu-ray) : DVD Talk Review of the Blu-ray". Dvdtalk.com. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  6. BD Horror News – Magnolia Pictures' 'The Signal' in February '08
  7. BD Horror News – Special Transmission & New Still From 'The Signal'
  8. cbs2.com – 2 Stabbed During Horror Movie In Fullerton, CBS 2/KCAL 9, Feb 25, 2008.
  9. "Blu-ray Review: The Signal (2007) | High-Def Digest". Bluray.highdefdigest.com. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  10. "Signal, The (DVD) | Horror Movie, DVD, & Book Reviews, News, Interviews at Dread Central". Dreadcentral.com. 2008-06-09. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  11. from Jacob Gentry Plus 4 years ago Not Yet Rated (2010-03-12). "The Signal Transmission 37: Crosstown Traffic on Vimeo". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 2014-04-12.
  12. 1 2 "Hidden Horror: The Signal". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved 2014-04-12.
  13. "The Signal Movie Reviews, Pictures". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  14. "The Signal Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More at Metacritic". Metacritic.com. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  15. Winning, Josh. "50 Greatest Indie Horror Film". TotalFilm.com. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  16. "Fierce acting gives 'The Signal' its power - Boston.com". Articles.boston.com. 2008-02-22. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  17. "The Signal Review | Movie Reviews and News". EW.com. 2008-02-20. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  18. Kemmerle, Karen (2013-10-07). "31 Days of Horror: 'The Signal' Should Be On Your Watchlist | Tribeca". Tribecafilm.com. Retrieved 2014-04-12.
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