The Bone Snatcher
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2014) |
The Bone Snatcher | |
---|---|
Directed by | Jason Wulfsohn |
Written by | Malcolm Kohll Gordon Render |
Produced by | Izidore Codron Koa Padolsky Chris Roland Malcolm Kohll |
Starring | Scott Bairstow Rachel Shelley Adrienne Pierce |
Cinematography | Andreas Poulsson |
Edited by | Richard Benwick |
Music by | Paul Heard Mike Pickering |
Production companies | The Imaginarium Focus Films Persistence Pictures Inc. |
Distributed by | Overseas FilmGroup First Look International |
Release date |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Countries | United Kingdom Canada South Africa |
Language | English |
Budget | $6 million |
The Bone Snatcher is a British-Canadian horror film directed by Jason Wolfsohn and starring Scott Bairstow, Rachel Shelley, and Adrienne Pierce. The film is based on a screenplay from Malcolm Kohll and Gordon Render.[1]
Plot
This section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards. (June 2017) |
When workers begin disappearing in a South African mine, Dr. Straker and a search team are sent into the desert to find out why the geologists of a diamond expedition have lost radio contact. They arrive at camp of the scientists in the desert, but soon find the neatly gnawed bones of their colleagues and a trail that leads them to a strange rock formation. Once at camp they find only the cleanly gnawed bones of the workers. Soon it becomes clear that there is a murderous beast on the loose.
The researchers decided to investigate the structure, but in the gathering darkness, sheer hell breaks loose as the creature, composed of a swarm of ant-like insects wrapped around the bones of its victims, hunts them for their bones. A game of cat and mouse continues through the desert, with the team being slowly picked off and the bug and bone monster eventually being chased down in a derelict mine.
Zack finds it hard to decide to kill the yellow queen brain that controls the swarm that has killed dozens of people, but he eventually does so. Suddenly, the derelict mine structure starts to fall down, leaving Zack and Mikki to run back to the truck - where they find they are now the only survivors of the team. The film ends with Mikki driving into the distance, apparently oblivious that a box loaded into her taxi contains another queen brain.
Cast
- Scott Bairstow as Dr. Zack Straker
- Rachel Shelley as Mikki
- Warrick Grier as Karl
- Patrick Shai as Titus
- Andre Weideman as Kurt
- Adrienne Pierce as Magda
- Patrick Lyster as Johan
- Brian Claxton Payne as The Creature
- Sean Higgs as Clive
- Jan Ellis as Harvey
- Langley Kirkwood as Paul
- Lulama J. Nombiba as Old Man
- Yusuf Hendrics as Taxi Driver
- Andre Jacobs as Dr. Muller
- Nikki Jackman as Mel
- Chris April as Muti Man
- Bo Petersen as Arctic Scientist 1
- Wayne Harrison as Arctic Scientist 2
- Rob van Vuuren as Arctic Scientist 3
Production
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2014) |
The film was shot in the year 2002 in the South African city Cape Town and in the desert from Namibia.[2]
Release
The Bone Snatcher was released on DVD by First Look Pictures on December 23, 2003.[3][4] It was re-released by Anchor Bay Entertainment on July 26 the following year. First Look later released the film on Steelbook on May 5, 2009.[4]
Reception
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2016) |
Critical reception for The Bone Snatcher has been predominantly negative. Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 0%, based on 6 reviews, with a rating average of 2.8/10.[5]
David Nusair of ReelFilm Reviews awarded the film a negative 1 out of a possible 4 stars, writing, "More than anything else, The Bone Snatcher is just dull. There's barely enough material here to fill a 15-minute short, let alone a 90-minute feature - and for a horror film, it's shockingly non-horrific".[6] Wayne Southworth of The Spinning Image gave the film 4/10 stars, criticizing the garbled language, which made understanding what the actor's were saying difficult. Southworth, however, commended the film's desert location as the best thing about the movie.[7]
References
- ^ The Bone Snatcher (2002) – A Review by David Nusair
- ^ The Bone Snatcher – Movie Review
- ^ The Bone Snatcher | Dracula's Curse DVD review- Acid Logic ezine
- ^ a b "The Bone Snatcher (2003) - Jason Wulfsohn". Allmovie.com. AllMove. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
- ^ "The Bone Snatcher (2003) - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes.com. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
- ^ Nusair, David. "The Bone Snatcher (2002) - A Review by David Nusair". Reel Film.com. David Nusair. Retrieved 3 May 2016.
- ^ Southworth, Wayne. "Bone Snatcher, The Review (2003)". The Spinning Image.co.uk. Wayne Southworth. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
External links
- 2003 films
- South African films
- English-language films
- South African horror films
- British horror films
- Canadian films
- British films
- 2003 horror films
- British monster movies
- Films shot in Namibia
- Canadian monster movies
- Films shot in South Africa
- Films set in Namibia
- Syfy original films
- 2000s monster movies
- American monster movies
- American films