Sunday 20 October 2019

Prey (2019)



"Low Budget Jungle Adventure 21st Century Style"

The new film from Franck Khalfoun, director of the 2012 remake of MANIAC, gets a digital and DVD release from Signature Entertainment.
Toby (Logan Miller from THE GOOD NEIGHBOUR, ESCAPE ROOM and the soon to go into production ESCAPE ROOM 2) witnesses the brutal stabbing to death of his father in a home invasion attack. As part of his behavioural recovery programme he has to spend three days and nights on an uninhabited island off the coast of Malaysia.


Of course it's not uninhabited or what would have been the point of those opening credits showing a caucasian pastor, his wife and little girl presumably on some sort of mission to convert the local tribe to Christianity. Needless to say by the time we get to the director credit it doesn't look as if everything went to plan for them.


Logan meets Madeleine (Kristine Frøseth from APOSTLE) while she's out hunting & she warns him not to stay on the beach at night, despite that being the pick up point at daybreak on day three. As his time on the island draws to a close Logan realises things (and the monster threatening the place) may not be all they seem.


The kind of 'jungle adventure' that was all the rage in the 1930s and then later in the 1970s, PREY offers us an interesting comparison with those older pictures in terms of behaviour of the male lead. In the 1930s Lionel Atwill would doubtless have tied the girl up for some naughty experiments. In the 1970s Jack Taylor would have slept with her amidst much crash zooming from good old Jess Franco who (if he was in the right mood) might also have given us a decent sex-obsessed tale of love gone wrong. In PREY, the 21st century equivalent, our wimpy 'hero' whines a bit and tries to hit her with a stick. 


And that's the main problem with PREY. It feels very slight indeed compared with what has gone before. Yes there's a jungle on an isolated island and yes there's a monster, but everything feels so impossibly airbrushed and safe that there's very little tension (or anything else) generated throughout the running time. And that's a great shame because director Franck Khalfoun did an excellent job of making MANIAC and his follow up i-LIVED isn't bad either. PREY, however, is strictly one for the trapped-on-an-island-with-an-ex-model obsessives. And I know you're out there, so just for you here's the trailer:




Franck Khalfoun's PREY is out on digital HD on 
Monday 28th October 2019 and on DVD on 
Monday 4th November 2019

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