Await Further Instructions

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Await Further Instructions
Release poster
Directed byJohnny Kevorkian
Written byGavin Williams
Produced by
  • Alan Latham
  • Jack Tarling
Starring
CinematographyAnnika Summerson
Edited byRichard Smither
Music byRichard Wells
Production
company
Distributed byShudder
Release date
5 October 2018
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office$3,617

Await Further Instructions is a 2018 British science-fiction horror film written by Gavin Williams and directed by Johnny Kevorkian. The film follows the members of a dysfunctional family who are trapped in their house on Christmas by a mysterious black membrane that begins to send them cryptic instructions through text that appears on their television.

Plot[edit]

Nick travels to the home of his parents, Tony and Beth, to spend Christmas there and introduce the family to his girlfriend Annji even though he has a strained relationship with them at best. His pregnant sister Kate, her husband Scott, and his grandfather are also there. Tensions arise after Kate and the grandfather both make racist remarks to Annji, who is of Indian descent. The family members quickly find that they are surrounded by a strange black substance and that they cannot leave the home. They receive messages warning them that their food is contaminated and instructing them to cleanse themselves with bleach, as well as take vaccines which are dropped down their chimney. Annji is suspicious of the vaccines as the syringes look used, but Tony forces everyone to inject them. The grandfather suddenly dies while vomiting black liquid.

Text appears on the television screen in the living room, informing them that one of them is infected. Tony, Beth, Kate, and Scott believe it to be Annji and lock her in an upstairs bedroom with the grandfather's corpse despite Nick's protests. Nick unplugs the television, but Tony plugs it back in and warns Nick against unplugging it again. Kate urges Scott to attack Nick, but she is injured in the chaos. A desperate Nick tries to find a way to secretly flee the home, only for the television to reveal this to the others. He attaches his phone to a long stick and uses it to record footage of the space where the toilet pipe leaves the house, capturing footage of a snake-like entity attacking the phone. Tony and Scott rush in, knock him unconscious, and drag him downstairs. The television tells them that Nick is a spy and that they must get information from him. Tony refuses to look at the phone footage and tortures Nick until Beth interrupts them to let them know that Kate has died.

The surviving family members are told to return to the first floor as the television is activating quarantine. Nick is able to get Annji downstairs but is unable to save Beth, who dies after being exposed to a mysterious black smoke. Nick and Annji rush downstairs to find the television displaying a bright light before Nick unplugs it. However, the light stays on and the house begins shaking. The television proclaims that it is being "resurrected" just before Nick passes out. He awakens to find that he and Annji have been restrained, and that the television wants Tony and Scott to sacrifice them. Tony attempts to kill Annji with an axe but Nick and Scott stop him, prompting him to murder Scott with the axe before fighting Nick. Tony is killed when Nick crushes his head with the television, which then pulls itself upright before the black wires crawl out of it and enter the back of Tony's head to take control of his corpse.

Nick and Annji realise that the black substance is composed entirely of the living wires. Nick confronts the wires and throws the axe into the television. The wires seemingly die, but soon begin moving without the television's help. Tony, being controlled by the wires, kills Nick and Annji with the axe. The wires digest Kate's body, leaving only her skeletal remains and her newborn baby. Tony brings in another television, which names the baby "Ruby" and displays colourful patterns to get her attention before changing to text that says "worship me". Outside, it is revealed that every single house has been wrapped in the same black wires.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Await Further Instructions follows a family being forced into an obedience experiment by an unearthly entity; the family's surname of Milgram is a reference to the infamous Milgram obedience experiment, while their home is located on Stanford Street in a reference to the Stanford prison experiment.[1] The script was written by Gavin Williams, with director Johnny Kevorkian stating that he chose to direct the film as "it was so different to the usual stuff that comes across [his] desk". Williams began writing the script after listening to the song "Apartment Story" by The National, taking inspiration from the lyric: "Stay indoors until somebody finds you / Do whatever the TV tells you."[2] Filming took place in Yorkshire.[3]

Reception[edit]

Box office[edit]

Await Further Instructions was released by American streaming platform Shudder. It grossed $3,618 worldwide with an additional $35,152 from home media sales as of July 2023.[4]

Critical response[edit]

Await Further Instructions received a 81% on Rotten Tomatoes from 21 reviews.[5] The film was named a Critic's Pick by the New York Times.[6] It received a 1.5/4 star review from Simon Abrams for RogerEbert.com and a 3/5 star review from Cath Clarke for The Guardian.[7][8] Abrams and Clarke both criticise the final section of the film, with Abrams stating that it "completely falls apart" and "not only stops making sense on a dramatic level, but a symbolic one", and Clarke feeling that despite interesting ideas, the film "throws it away with the same old horror film cliches in a finale that fails to satisfy the buildup". Abrams also disliked the "one-dimensional" characters, "uniformly flat" acting, "dull" cinematography, and the way the film's "half-baked" social critique about the power of television "doesn't have anything intelligible to say". Matt Donato reviewed it for Dread Central, stating that it "launches into survivalist psychotics that embrace walled-in escalation, always building towards that finale [...] the ride is filled with highs and lows, but damn if Johnny Kevorkian doesn't stick that landing".[9]

External links[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ https://imdb.com/title/tt4971408
  2. ^ "On the Set of AWAIT FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS". STARBURST Magazine. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  3. ^ "Await Further Instructions (2018) – Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  4. ^ "Await Further Instructions (2018) – Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved 8 July 2023.
  5. ^ "Await Further Instructions (2018)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  6. ^ Catsoulis, Jeannette (4 October 2018). "Review: In 'Await Further Instructions,' a Family Home Becomes a Battleground". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 29 September 2020.
  7. ^ "Await Further Instructions review – sweatily tense Christmas horror". The Guardian. 5 December 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  8. ^ Abrams, Simon. "Await Further Instructions movie review (2018) | Roger Ebert". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 13 May 2022.
  9. ^ "Scary Movies XI: AWAIT FURTHER INSTRUCTIONS Review – How Screen Obsessions Will Kill Us All". Dread Central. 21 August 2018. Retrieved 13 May 2022.