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Evil Aliens

 
Movies:

Evil Aliens

  • Director: Jake West
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Horror Comedy, Slapstick
  • Themes: Evil Aliens
  • Main Cast: Emily Booth, Christopher Adamson, Norman Lovett, Jodie Shaw, Samuel Butler, Peter McNeil O'Connor
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 89 minutes

Plot

A tabloid television news magazine host and her ramshackle crew have a gruesome close encounter when they set out to investigate an alien abduction in director Jake West's no-holds-barred splatstick comedy. Cat (Jennifer Evans) and her boyfriend were copulating in a moonlit graveyard when they were abducted by a malevolent gang of extraterrestrials and forced to endure a most unseemly series of highly-intrusive medical tests. Though Cat would eventually find her way back to terra firma, something strange seems to be growing inside of her and the man she was with that night has never been heard from again. When exploitive "Weird Worlde" hostess Michelle Fox (Emily Booth) catches wind of the Cat's story, she sees it as the perfect opportunity to resuscitate her failing ratings and get her show back in the spotlight. With keen-eyed cameraman Ricky (Sam Butler), stoned-out sound guy Jack (Peter McNeil O'Connor", spotty-skinned ufologist Gavin (Jamie Honeybourne) and reenactment actors Candy (Jodie Shaw) and Bruce (Nick Smithers) in tow, the determined television host sets out for the Welsh peninsula where the abduction took place to get the scoop and make a buck. Upon arriving at their remote destination, the crew quickly discovers that Cat, who lives in a decrepit farmhouse with her three inbred brothers, is in an advanced state of pregnancy despite only having been inseminated by the attacking extraterrestrials just days ago. It's not long before the murderous aliens show up at the farmhouse seeking to see what kind of progress their interspecies offspring has made, and as the terrified humans stage a last stand against the interstellar invaders the stage is set for a man-versus-alien bloodbath that threatens to soak the stars in gore. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Review

Thick-skinned gore-hounds looking to have a bit of a laugh with a six pack and some friends may find plenty to chuckle about while watching Razor Blade Smile director Jake West's hyper-violent comedy shocker, but fans of the genre and Peter Jackson's early work in particular may walk away feeling that there is simply too much borrowed from better films to make Evil Aliens feel like anything worth crowing about. Opening with an alien abduction and a violent anal probe performed with what appears to be Black and Decker drill outfitted with leftover props from David Cronenberg's Dead Ringers, Evil Aliens subsequently pulls back to detail the introduce the tabloid television reporter who, along with a ragtag crew and a pair of flaky actors, sets out to cover the story that promises to save her flashy fortean program from cancellation. Upon arriving at the remote scene of the crime, the entire group is instantaneously flanked by a gang of murderous extraterrestrials intent on violently disposing with anyone who dare meddle in their deviant interstellar experiments. While the action flows fast and fluid, the tone is gleefully over-the-top, and the blood flies by the bucketful, anyone not viewing Evil Aliens during a crowded midnight screening will likely find that the humor in the film just isn't as effective as it was in such landmark bloodbaths as Re-Animator, Evil Dead II, or Dead Alive, and without a talented writer to rely on the humor simply becomes too uneven to sustain the film's manic tone. While undemanding newcomers will likely be blown away by the sheer audacity of it all, those who have seen it done better are likely to find themselves groaning through the flatline jokes while picking out the countless references to the superior efforts that inspired Evil Aliens. It's simply hard to lose yourself in the proceedings when the constant barrage of recycled jokes begins to overwhelm any true sense of originality. Combine that with the fact that West's menacing extraterrestrial invaders look like low-rent stunt-men in dime store Predator costumes and the stink of second-hand material simply becomes too overwhelming to bear. Of course that's not to say that West and company don't get points for style, and with gonzo fight sequences that are executed energetically enough to occasionally transcend the film's monstrously derivative shortcomings many viewers will no-doubt find cause to be somewhat forgiving. When the credits finally role following the one inspired joke that serves to bring the film full circle, the audience is likely to be split between two camps: on one side the viewer whose punch-drunk inner fifteen year-old allows them to walk away with a sly giggle - and on the other the more demanding gore-hound whose cynical sigh signals there is still some time to come before the next true splatstick classic drenches the screen with sticky-sweet plasma. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Emily Booth - Michelle Fox
  • Christopher Adamson - Llyr Williams/Evil Alien Surgeon
  • Norman Lovett - Howard Marsden
  • Jodie Shaw - Candy Vixen
  • Samuel Butler - Ricky Anderson
  • Peter McNeil O'Connor - Jack Campbell
Jamie Honeybourne - Gavin Gorman; Jennifer Evans - Cat Williams; Eden Ford - Angelo Jones; Nick Smithers - Bruce Burton; Mark Hayes - Dai Williams; Chris Thomas - Thomas Williams

Credit

Cal Westbrook - Costume Designer, Jake West - Director, Jake West - Editor, Quentin Reynolds - Executive Producer, Richard Wells - Composer (Music Score), Alison Wright - Musical Direction/Supervision, Life Creations - Makeup Special Effects, Neil Jenkins - Production Designer, James Solan - Cinematographer, Jim Solan - Cinematographer, Tim Dennison - Producer, Ben Meechan - Sound/Sound Designer, Jake West - Screenwriter, John Bentley - Set Decorator

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Evil Aliens

Poster for Evil Aliens
Directed by Jake West
Produced by Falcon Film Productions
Written by Jake West
Starring Emily Booth
Christopher Adamson
Norman Lovett
Music by Richard Wells
Editing by Jake West
Distributed by ContentFilm (UK)
Image Entertainment (USA)
Release date(s) March 10, 2006 (UK)
September 6, 2006 (U.S.)
Running time 89 minutes (UK)
Language English
Budget $1,800,000

Evil Aliens (2006), is a British "splatstick" horror-comedy film directed by Jake West, in the tradition of films such as Braindead, House, and Evil Dead.

It was the first full-length British horror film to be filmed using Sony HD (High Definition) cameras, and contains almost 140 digital effects shots and a huge amount of gory conventional special effects.

Contents

Plot

The film begins with the alien abduction on Scalleum, a remote island off the coast of Wales, of Cat Williams and her boyfriend. Cat's boyfriend is gorily killed, and Cat is (also gorily) implanted with an alien fetus. Cat's story attracts the attention of Michelle "Foxy" Fox (Emily Booth), the bosomy host of the cable TV show Weird Worlde, who brings a film crew to the island — her cameraman boyfriend Sam (Ricky Anderson); Jack the sound man; nerdy UFO expert Gavin Gorman; and actors Bruce Barton and Candy Vixen (the latter, Foxy's producer assures her, "because she's good, not because she's my girlfriend").

The island is accessible via a narrow causeway only at low tide. The Weird Worlde crew sets out in their van, but it is dark by the time they reach the Williams family's creepy farmhouse, where they meet Cat and her three hulking and sadistic brothers (who speak only Welsh with English subtitles). The crew (with the exception of Gavin Gorman) initially assume that Cat's story is a hoax, and even go so far as to make a crop circle in a nearby field so they can film it for the show, to Gorman's great disgust. However, it soon turns out that the aliens are all too real and rather malevolent.

The film crew teams up with the Welsh Williams brothers to fight off the aliens, with a great deal of blood and gore. One highlight features Sam running down some aliens in a combine harvester, to the tune of "Combine Harvester (Brand New Key)" by The Wurzels.

Eventually, the alien child inside Cat claws its way out; on board the alien ship, Foxy is impregnated with another alien fetus while Gavin loses his virginity to a shapely female alien; Bruce, Candy, and the Welsh brothers meet various horrible demises; Sam blows up himself and four alien pursuers in a tank of liquid manure; back at the house, the female alien rips Foxy in half; and finally Gavin manages to use his laptop (in a sequence reminiscent of Independence Day) to overload the ley lines of the nearby stone circle. As Cat's alien child rips his arms off, Gavin manages to press the space bar with his nose, sending the stones shooting into the underside of the alien craft, which crashes into a convenient mountain. Jack the sound man, meanwhile, having been blinded by alien ichor early in the film, swims across the channel to the mainland, only to discover that he's lost the videotape that was the only proof of their extraterrestrial encounter.

The film ends with a clip from an alien talk show reminiscent of Jerry Springer (and subtitled in English), on which Gavin's female alien is trying to explain how her entire crew was killed by humans and she herself carries the love child of one of those humans. The audience roars with laughter, and the host cuts her mike.

Cast

The film features an ensemble cast including TV presenter Emily Booth, Jamie Honeybourne, Christopher Adamson, Norman Lovett, Scott Joseph, model Jodie Shaw, and Jennifer Evans.

  • Emily Booth – Michelle Fox
  • Jamie Honeybourne – Gavin Gorman
  • Sam Butler – Ricky Anderson
  • Jodie Shaw – Candy Vixen
  • Peter McNeil O'Connor – Jack Campbell
  • Nick Smithers – Bruce Barton
  • Norman Lovett – Howard Marsden
  • Christopher Adamson – Llyr Williams/Surgeon Alien
  • Jennifer Evans – Cat Williams
  • Mark Richard Hayes – Dai Williams
  • Chris Thomas – Thomas Williams
  • Scott Joseph – Lead Alien
  • Mildred von Heildegard – Female Alien
  • [[Tim Clark, Mark Holloway, Glenn Collier – Aliens
  • Tree Carr – Dream Alien
  • Dan Palmer – Onkey (UFO Witness 1)
  • James Heathcote – Merv (UFO Witness 2)

Production

Evil Aliens is the first in a slate of films planned[citation needed] by the British production company Falcon Film Productions PLC, and the second feature film from director Jake West (Razor Blade Smile). The film was produced by Tim Dennison (Lighthouse, Revenge of Billy the Kid, Silent Cry); the executive producer was Quentin Reynolds.

Filming

Although the film is set in Wales, most of it was actually filmed on a farm in Cambridgeshire, including the combine harvester sequence and the UFO crash. The harvester was provided by a local agricultural contracting firm, and driven by one of their staff (whose hand is visible controlling the harvester during much of the sequence).

Soundtrack

Release

After showings at various film festivals in 2005, Evil Aliens was released in the UK on March 10, 2006, by ContentFilm International, who also act as international sales agents. Image Entertainment released the film in U.S. cinemas on September 6, 2006. It was released on DVD (with extras) in the UK on 26 September 2006. American DVD release was scheduled for October 2007.[citation needed]

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