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Reeker (2006) Certificate 15

Reeker

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Rated 2.5 stars
Average rating
(51%)
 
Starring: Devon Gummersall | Derek Richardson | Arielle Kebbel | Michael Ironside
Director: Dave Payne
Studio: PATHE DISTRIBUTION
Run time: 87 mins
Genres: Horror
Languages: English
Released: November 13, 2006

Strangers trapped at an eerie travel oasis in the desert must unravel the mystery behind their visions of dying people while they are preyed upon by a decaying creature.

Highest rated reviews

25 out of 30 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
Better than expected.

craig mitchell from Bognor Regis,uk, 20th January, 2007

Well i must admit on first glance the title just screamed low budget direct to video crap(ive seen plenty!)But to my surprise it was highly enjoyable,the characters were fairly likeable although mainly unknown,including a decent supporting performance from movie stalwart Michael Ironside.Rookie director Dave Payne certainly knew how to create tension despite the mainly one shot location,and there were some good jumps in a lot of scenes.The ending is good though i did guess it about 25 mins into the film,its similar to another horror i saw a couple of years ago.Recommended to all horror fans,just dont let the title put you off!!

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14 out of 17 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
This is no stinker

Vaughan from Grimsby, UK, 13th December, 2006

An interesting film. What seems like a cliche slasher horror turns into something strangely brilliant by the end. A stupid no-brainer popcorn flick in essence, which the director clearly plays on. The ending is played out fantastically and as a result - definitely worth sitting through. I had no idea what the film was about, which is why it probably made more of an impact. Anyway, give it a go - and don't let the god-awful title put you off.

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13 out of 13 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4 stars
DEAD GOOD

A Customer from Liverpool, 24th October, 2008

Cheap sounding smelly title, probably just another run of the mill slasher, right? Nope, but I hesitated for a loooong time to watch this. Well, I am happy to report that Reeker in fact is very good, one of the cleverer horror movies- and it is still, if not more, enjoyable second time around. Granted, it relies to an extent on a big twist at the end, but hey, Sixth Sense or Usual Suspects would not have been hailed as great movies without it. Reeker is by no means big or awesome, but it is entertaining enough, has a few scares and jumps in the right places and some quirky characters that get stalked around a deserted motel by an evil presence trailing rot and decay. It has the creep factor big time and a toilet scene which will make you think 'Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the bathroom'- and yes, it has the big eye opener (or is that nose opener?) at the end, but even if you saw that coming half way through the film (or read the summary to Reeker 2, which gives the concept away really) this is highly enjoyable, clever horror which is not to be sniffed at. A CORKER NOT A STINKER! SEE THIS IF YOU LIKED * IDENTITY * SOUL SURVIVOR * FINAL DESTINATION

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9 out of 9 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5 stars
Reeker is very clever

Dingle from from Hull, 19th November, 2007

Reeker is a fantastic film! i thought it would be like any other horror flick- a load of teens go off on a trip and unsuspectingly start dying 1 by 1. And it seems to start off that way but the ending delivers much more and an unbelievable twist that i would never of thought of... very clever writing

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Most recent reviews

*** May contain spoilers ***


Rated 4 stars
Something smells odd!

jlp2k9 from , 19th January, 2010

It's become increasingly more arduous to formulate something fresh and inventive within the horror genre of late, what with ceaseless remakes and reboots that only succeed in disquieting and piquing real genre fans. So it's invigorating to come across a film that is bold and tries something new and idiosyncratic, Dave Payne's Reeker plows the, as yet, unfurrowed turf of effluvium related horror... baffled? Well read on dear friends. This tale opens with a cadre of college students who get together to take a trek out to 'Area 52', a grandiose rave party in an un-named desert hideaway. Encountering each other for the first time, this coterie is full of interesting partygoers. There's Trip (Whyte), the party animal with a predilection for MDMA; Gretchen (Illman), the tenacious, worldly-wise South African; Cookie (Kebbel), the ditzy blonde fledgling; Nelson (Richardson), the trendy DJ'ing asinine one; and Jack (Gummersall), the token blind guy... ok I know 'token blind guy' is not your conventional horror staple... and that is the first clue that this film is just a wee bit atypical. There's just one problem for this heteromorphous assemblage: Trip has swiped a capacious amount of Ecstasy from Radford (Mabius), a drug dealing, blackballed, medical intern who is now hell-bent on retrieving his stolen goods. So, as you may imagine, it certainly is not the ideal time to have car troubles and find yourself stranded at a forsaken gas station in the middle of nowhere. As night thunders in and with no one in sight, they elect to set up camp and have Trip go out to try and find some assistance. Unexpectedly a malignant malodorousness swirls in and by and by the college partygoers are fighting for their lives against an invisible scourge with body odor, literally, from Hell! Now, let's get this said from the off, I had no expectations of Reeker to be anything but a formulaic 'ripened teens in peril' horror movie, especially at the bargain price of $2.50, little did I know that I was going to get an idiosyncratic, veraciously pithy and concise avant-garde fable with several effective scares and a hipness that many of it's big budget brethren would be well served to feign every once in a while. The production is, without a doubt, diminutive, filmed mostly at one desert location, but thanks to some sublime cinematography from Mike Mickens fused to Payne's dexterous direction, Reeker contradicts it's low budget origins amazingly effectively. The motel set is fastidiously realised and resplendently alluring, while the colour scheme is low key and elusively malignant, all cadaverous yellows and bloody reds. Especially potent is the way that Payne utilises visual contrivances to convey the none-visual phenomena of a repulsive malodorousness which accompanies the putrefying phantom, ruses the viewer soon becomes comfortable with as a signpost of the immanent horrors to follow. The whole endeavor has a very 'classic horror movie' feel, bearing a closer semblance to Identity, with fragments of Herk Harvey's exemplary Carnival of Souls, with a smidgen of Hills Have Eyes/Death Valley style stalk-and-slash and Cube's existential abstruseness, rather than the usual, banal modern day 'slasher' fare. The characters are all intensely convincing and well-acted by a cast of almost (as then) unknowns, the standout being Devon Gummersall as Jack, the rare example of a handicapped character being utilized to enhance a plot rather than just being portrayed as a burdensome victim. There is a twist ending, which for me tend not to work well in 'slasher' genre pictures, in the case of Reeker, this is the primary reason why the film consummately feels so satiating, with a disclosure that will make you wish you'd paid closer attention to the foregoing story threads. Much like Fincher's Fight Club you will find yourself hungering to go back and rewatch it just to see what you missed. I presupposed nothing from this film and despite that, it left me enamored, it is a cogent, gory and well made little horror film with a killer twist. Director and writer Dave Payne has augmented, what may seem on the surface to be, just another case of unequivocal horror fare and constructed something novel and beguiling. It's invigorating to unearth an independent movie that doesn't take itself too seriously and prosaically enthralls. Verdict: Watch it twice, you won't be disappointed.

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Rated 2 stars
Shame

Mogwai from , 13th January, 2010

Unfortunatley we watched Reeker 2 first and thought it was such a good film that the original had to be brilliant but this is not the case, its very rare a sequel is better than the oringinal. Reeker is a bit slow in places and i understood the twist from the start.

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Rated 2 stars
good/made no sense

A Customer from London, 14th December, 2009

i liked this one but i struggled with the plot i could not make sense of it a group off teenagers get straned in a deserted cafe but a killer is awaiting in the form of a grim reaper and that is whe itwent muddy for me the plot made no sense a i struggled to find the reason for the blood shed a good watch if you can make sense of it

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*** May contain spoilers ***


Rated 2 stars
Clever... but...

wikkidsmyle from , 10th November, 2009

After a promising start, we settle back to watch the usual group of America's finest head off towards oblivion and a date with a gruesome shrouded figure who picks them off one by one. Good points: the story (including the surprise conclusion) and the selection of cast, and the spooky atmosphere. Bad points: for a film that barely runs 90 minutes we spend WAY too long before anyone gets gruesomely murdered - and just WHAT was the point getting in Michael Ironside who spends barely 10 minutes on screen?

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