Deathwatch (2002 film)

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Deathwatch
Deathwatch-cinema-quad-movie-poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMichael J. Bassett
Written byMichael J. Bassett
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyHubert Taczanowski
Edited byAnne Sopel
Music by
Distributed byLions Gate Entertainment
Release date
  • 6 December 2002 (2002-12-06)
Running time
94 minutes
Countries
  • United Kingdom
  • Germany
LanguageEnglish
Box office$2,270,658

Deathwatch is a 2002 British-German horror war film written and directed by M. J. Bassett (then known as Michael J. Bassett) and starring Jamie Bell, Laurence Fox, Kris Marshall, Matthew Rhys, and Andy Serkis. A lost squad of British soldiers in World War I take shelter in an abandoned enemy trench, but it proves to be no refuge as the men find themselves hunted by unseen evils.

Plot[]

During World War I, soldiers of the British 5th Battalion's White Company under Captain Jennings charge a German trench as part of a larger assault. The young Private Charlie Shakespeare initially refuses to join the attack but is coaxed along by Sergeant Tate. Many soldiers fall to machine-gun fire, artillery strikes, and the unit becomes lost in the fog.

After walking for hours, carrying Private Colin Chevasse who has been left paraplegic, the unit comes across a complex, maze-like network of trenches. There they find three terrified Germans, who ignore Private Willie McNess's cries for surrender in apparent fear of something further down the trenches. Private Thomas Quinn shoots and kills one but Willie stops him, the second German flees, and the third, Friedrich, surrenders. Convinced they have broken through the enemy lines, the soldiers decide to secure the trenches. They explore and find ominous signs that something has gone very wrong: rotting bodies with protruding barbed wire and German bayonets litter the ground. Compasses and watches also have stopped working. While detonating charges to close off some passages, they hear a demon-like growl and vast amounts of blood pour from the mud.

Private Jack Hawkstone is ambushed by the second German hiding in the mud. Jack and Private Barry Starinski wound and subdue the German, but Thomas executes him with a pistol shot to the head and scalps him despite Tate's interference. Attempts to contact support via a crystal radio reveal White Company was thought to have been obliterated during the assault before communications are lost.

Their first night in the trench starts uneventfully and Corporal "Doc" Fairweather treats the wounded. Barry secludes himself but is distracted by strange sounds and finds three German corpses wrapped in barbed wire in a standing position. As he shouts to alert the others, one of the corpses suddenly comes to life and ambushes him. Charlie and Tate then find Barry's corpse lashed to the wall with barbed wire. Suspecting that hidden German troops are responsible, the men violently interrogate Friedrich (who can also speak French, which Charlie understands). He explains that the other Germans turned on each other and that there is "evil" in the trenches.

The next morning, White Company piles up the German dead and clear the dugouts with grenades in case of any more hiding in the tunnels and caves. Phantom sounds of artillery and infantry are then heard, causing Jennings to crack under the pressure and mistakenly shoot Jack in the head when he hears him coming from behind. Morale and discipline deteriorate even further, with Willie thinking of deserting. That night he is chased by an eerie red mist, hears voices, and is drenched in blood. Possessed by fear, he flees into no man's land only to be shot by Private Anthony Bradford. Doc attempts a rescue, but Willie, only able to crawl, is pursued by something under the mud that drags him down to his death. Meanwhile, Anthony, convinced that both he and the trenches are possessed by death, asks Charlie to shoot him so he will not kill anyone else. When the latter refuses, Anthony runs off.

In the morning, Thomas crucifies Friedrich on a wooden beam in no man's land and savagely beats him with a club. Jennings, now mad, orders an inspection and demands that Thomas fall in, but he instead subdues and stabs Jennings to death. Tate attacks Thomas, but during the fight gets tangled in barbed wire. Charlie tries to save him but Thomas kills Tate with the club and taunts Charlie when he refuses to shoot. Thomas is then stopped by living strands of barbed wire that rise up from the mud and begin to wrap around and impale him, forcing Charlie to kill him.

Back in the trench, Charlie arms Friedrich, who has been crippled by Thomas's torture, with a rifle to defend himself and runs off to find Doc. He finds Colin who, though pale and covered in flies, appears to be able to move his legs again. However, lifting the blanket reveals that it is only the rats that have eaten his legs. Charlie shoots Colin in the head to put him out of his misery. He runs off again and finds Anthony, who has tied Doc up with barbed wire and both men plead Charlie to kill Anthony. Again, Charlie refuses, and Anthony shoots Doc in the head. Shakespeare finally gives in and bayonets Anthony and shoots him.

The soil under the German dead starts to cave in, while barbed wire blocks every passage, so Charlie stumbles and is sucked down into the pit. He wakes up in a cave full of corpses, where living versions of his unit sit eating together just as they were the first night, including himself. He flees, reaching the trenches. Friedrich, now in perfect health, appears and points his rifle at him. Charlie, exasperated by the apparent betrayal, shouts in both English and French that he tried to help him. Friedrich acknowledges this in English, saying he is free to go, pointing to a ladder leading up into no man's land before seemingly vanishing. Charlie climbs out of the trench and leaves to an unknown fate, disappearing into the fog.

Some time later, another team of British soldiers arrives at the trench. Seeing Friedrich sitting idly alone, they shout at him to surrender, to which he complies by lifting his hands. He then gives an ominous stare before the screen fades, implying that this will all happen again.

Cast[]

  • Jamie Bell as Private Charlie Shakespeare. Aged 16, he lied about his age to sign up, but is initially more cowardly than the other men.
  • Ruaidhri Conroy as Private Colin Chevasse, who is left paraplegic by a spine injury and has to be cared for.
  • Laurence Fox as Captain Bramwell Jennings, the unit's official commander, but is seen as "out of his depth."
  • Dean Lennox Kelly as Private Willie McNess, a Scotsman and the unit's point man.
  • Torben Liebrecht as Friedrich, a German soldier taken prisoner by White Company.
  • Kris Marshall as Private Barry Starinski, the unit's marksman.
  • Hans Matheson as Private Jack Hawkstone. He carries a harmonica, playing it to lift morale.
  • Hugh O'Conor as Private Anthony Bradford, the unit's chaplain and radio operator.
  • Matthew Rhys as Corporal "Doc" Fairweather, the unit's medic.
  • Andy Serkis as Private Thomas Quinn. He is brutal, remorseless, and eerily at home with the violence of war.
  • Hugo Speer as Sergeant David Tate. The squad XO, Tate is seen as more of a leader by the men than Jennings.
  • Mike Downey as Captain Martin Plummer
  • Pavel Tesar as Mudman (the second German)

Release[]

Home media[]

The film was released on DVD by Fox on 16 Jun 2003. It was re-released by Live/Artisan on 22 Jun 2004 and again by Pathe on 3 Oct 2005.[1]

Reception[]

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Deathwatch received an approval rating of 25% based on 8 reviews, with an average rating of 4.6/10.[2] Critics mostly praised the film's creative premise and atmosphere, but criticized its story execution and editing.

Alan Jones of The Radio Times rated the film one out of five stars, writing, "There's little to set the pulse racing, apart from some ghostly noises and a few gory effects, and Bassett's lumbering direction blasts any artistry, horror or suspense clean out of the target area."[3] Allmovie gave the film a positive review calling it "a highly crafted atmospheric creep-out that knows when to go for the jugular and when to slather on the paranoia".[4] TV Guide awarded the film 2.5/4 stars stating: "Bassett deserves half a salute for Twilight Zone-ish wallow in WWI misery, which works up some creepy atmosphere between scenes of dehumanizing combat. But the spook show element ultimately seems simultaneously ghoulish and hokey, and the pacifist moral is hammered home with blunt obviousness".[5] Peter Bradshaw from The Guardian gave the film a mixed review, praising the film's premise and direction but panned the film's dull script.[6] Nev Pierce from BBC awarded the film three out of five stars, while noting the film had its faults, Pierce called it "A creepy, authentically nasty little horror film".[7]

References[]

  1. ^ "Deathwatch (2002) - Michael J. Bassett". AllMovie.com. AllMovie. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  2. ^ "Deathwatch (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  3. ^ Jones, Alan. "Deathwatch – review". Radio Times. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
  4. ^ Wheeler, Jeremy. "Deathwatch (2002) - Review - AllMovie". AllMovie.com. Jeremy Wheeler. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  5. ^ Pardi, Robert. "Deathwatch Review". TV Guide.com. Robert Pardi. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  6. ^ Bradshaw, Peter. "Deathwatch | Culture | The Guardian". The Guardian.com. Peter Bradshaw. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  7. ^ Pierce, Nev. "BBC - Films - review - Deathwatch". BBC.co.uk. British Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 6 November 2019.

External links[]

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