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ActionAdventureHorror

Outpost

- You can't kill what's already dead!

In a seedy bar in a town ravaged by war, scientist and businessman Hunt hires mercenary and former Royal Marine D.C. to assemble a crack team of ex-soldiers to protect him on a dangerous journey into no-man's land. Their mission is to scope out an old military bunker in Eastern Europe. It should be easy – 48 hours at the most. Lots of cash for little risk. Or so he says...

Release Date : 2008-03-11

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Black Camel PicturesRegent Capital

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles : Outpost 1 - El Bunker

Cast

Ray Stevenson

Character Name : D.C.

Original Name : Ray Stevenson

Gender : Male

Julian Wadham

Character Name : Hunt

Original Name : Julian Wadham

Gender : Male

Richard Brake

Character Name : Prior

Original Name : Richard Brake

Gender : Male

Paul Blair

Character Name : Jordan

Original Name : Paul Blair

Gender : Male

Brett Fancy

Character Name : Taktarov

Original Name : Brett Fancy

Gender : Male

Ene Frost

Character Name : Cotter

Original Name : Ene Frost

Gender : Male

Julian Rivett

Character Name : Voyteche

Original Name : Julian Rivett

Gender : Male

Michael Smiley

Character Name : McKey

Original Name : Michael Smiley

Gender : Male

Johnny Meres

Character Name : The Breather

Original Name : Johnny Meres

Gender : Male

Xuki Robeli

Character Name : Newsreader

Original Name : Xuki Robeli

Gender : Male

Scott Peden

Character Name : Nazi Soldier 1

Original Name : Scott Peden

Gender : Male

Charlie Jeffrey

Character Name : Nazi Soldier 2

Original Name : Charlie Jeffrey

Gender : Male

Graeme Temple

Character Name : Nazi Soldier 3

Original Name : Graeme Temple

Gender : Male

Reviews

A

Arrrrrrrach

@Arrrrrrrach

2021-06-23

This film should have been more than it was. The premise is great, the atmosphere is spot-on, the costumes and make-up are menacing and the characters are pretty decent. This menace is somehow lost, however, at some point during the overblown final plot-arc, which is a major shame because it really looks stunning and builds up some satisfying apprehension. I cannot give it less than three stars, but only because I absolutely love this sort of thing, having grown up with Wolfenstein and Doom to take me to the early hours. One day somebody will nail this idea and unleash true grim krieg.

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Down in an abandoned bunker in Eastern Europe... "SPOILERS" Outpost is the feature length directing debut of Steve Barker, it's written by Rae Brunton and is produced by Arabella Croft & Kieran Parker; who financed the film themselves by mortgaging their own Glasgow home. Starring are Ray Stevenson, Julian Wadham, Richard Brake & Michael Smiley. The plot sees scientist and businessman Hunt (Wadham) hire a mercenary crack team headed by DC (Stevenson) to protect him on a perilous mission into Eastern Europe. There they are to locate an abandoned bunker in no-man's land and seemingly gather information to aid Hunt's research. However, once at the outpost, the men make a horrific discovery - one that is only the start of the terror to come. Lets get the blatantly obvious negatives out the way first, the kind that pithy critics enjoy beating an independent film with. Outpost is not fresh, certainly not in story, setting and god forbid -- logic. Channeling (by the makers own admission) John Carpenter's spooky 1980 movie The Fog - with more than a nod towards Michael Mann's The Keep & Ken Wiederhorn's Almost Human - Outpost does, from the off, have a familiar ring to it. Yet Barker's movie can stand on its own two ghostly feet on account of it having heavy atmosphere that's nicely blended with no short supply of the grisly. This is not about cheap shocks, though. Barker slow burns the first half hour and then steadily turns up the heat as the secrets of the "Outpost" start to unravel, with the sense of dread that accompanies said unravelling palpable in the extreme. Away from the rewarding creepy vibe that dominates the piece, the technical aspects also stand up considerably well. Barker's directing is unobtrusive and aware of its genre roots, with a cartoon/animation section deftly effective, while Brunton's screenplay is lean and lets the characters breath. That it has commentary on the barbaric nature of the Nazis and slots in a Die Glocke for its core, also, should not be understated, war is hell is as apt a saying here, as apt can be. Note worthy on the war is hell theme is that here the makers are saying war is always and everywhere,… not only is the film set with one foot in a historic war and the other in a "today" war, but each of the mercenaries represent a soldier from a different war-zone around the world. With the wooded valley of Dalbeattie near Castle Douglas in Scotland standing in for Eastern Europe, Gavin Struthers does wonders on photography. Smartly stripping the colours down to a near monochrome finish that lends weight to the historical context of the story, he also makes the interiors claustrophobic and captures rich detail for the exteriors. The score from James Seymour Brett is one of the better ones for a low-fi British horror, suitably pulse like, and the acting is no-nonsense and befitting the characters within. With a no cop out and suitably bleak ending, Outpost isn't after the popcorn crowd. It may be heavily influenced by past down in the woods army like shockers, but it sure as hell shows the likes of Rob Green's awful 2001 movie, The Bunker, how it should be done. 7/10