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Let Us Prey (2014)

Let Us Prey
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Movie Let Us Prey (2014)
Real Title Let Us Prey
Rating 5.7
Duration 92 Min
Aired 2014-04-17
Languages HINDI
Subtitle NA
Quality Bluray
Sources IMDB | TMDB

Countries

Ireland, United Kingdom

Genres

ThrillerHorror

Tags

Small townNight shiftPolice brutalityPoliceScotlandPsychopathConfessionBlood splatterTeacherMurderArsonSerial killerPolice stationDrunk drivingStrangerJail cell

Directors

Brian O'Malley

Stars

Liam Cunningham, Niall Greig Fulton, Pollyanna McIntosh, Douglas Russell, Bryan Larkin, Hanna Stanbridge

Writers

David Cairns, Fiona Watson

Companies

Greenhouse Media Investment, Makar Productions, Fantastic Films

Taglines

Taglines: Darkness Shall Rise

Description

Rachel, a rookie cop, is about to begin her first night shift in a neglected police station in a Scottish, backwater town. The kind of place where the tide has gone out and stranded a motley bunch of the aimless, the forgotten, the bitter-and-twisted who all think that, really, they deserve to be somewhere else. They all think they're there by accident and that, with a little luck, life is going to get better. Wrong, on both counts. Six is about to arrive - and All Hell Will Break Loose!

Reviews:

Author: John Chard
The number of the beast? An apparent victim of a hit and run, a mysterious stranger is held at a remote police station and starts to take over the emotional state of staff and inmates alike. It's not a new premise, something which is being held against Brian O'Malley's film like it's a crime, but the execution, the technical guile, and atmospheric touches brought to the piece, mark this out as a horror film of some merit. Boosted by having the great Liam Cunningham in the lead role, it's a film that shocks and awes with each passing chapter. It revels in the bloody aspects that unfold, positioning the vile nature that some human's are prone to right at the forefront, and with bloody impact. Piers McGrail's cinematography is superb, the bold and beautiful shine of the blues and golden browns mingle disconcertingly with the down and dirty feel of the police cells, the latter of which appropriately marry up with the characters on show. Steve Lynch's score is a treat, a real nerve bothering piece of work, gnawing away at the senses in the same way that Cunningham's character tugs away at the emotional conditions of his prey. It's a film of many pleasures for the so inclined, it does get away from itself a little at the end, asking a little too much of the viewer, but it doesn't kill the pic and this is very much a horror necklace worth wearing on a night out. 7/10

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