Shrooms (film)

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Shrooms
Shroomsposter.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPaddy Breathnach
Written byPearse Elliott
Produced byPaddy McDonald
StarringLindsey Haun
Jack Huston
Max Kasch
Maya Hazen
Alice Greczyn
Don Wycherley
Sean McGinley
Robert Hoffman
CinematographyNanu Segal
Edited byDermot Diskin
Music byDario Marianelli
Production
companies
Distributed byVertigo Films
Release date
  • 23 November 2007 (2007-11-23)
Running time
86 minutes
CountryIreland
LanguageEnglish
Box office$4.9 million.[1]

Shrooms is a 2007 Irish psychological slasher film written by Pearse Elliot and directed by Paddy Breathnach. The film stars Lindsey Haun, Jack Huston, and Max Kasch. The plot follows a group of American students[2] and their English guide who are stalked by a serial killer while out in the woods looking for psilocybin mushrooms.

Plot[]

American student Tara and her college friends visit Ireland to meet with local resident and friend Jake, and go camping in woodlands surrounding a long-disused children's home. While collecting psilocybin mushrooms for later consumption, Tara eats a death bell mushroom (Galerina) and suffers a seizure after which she experiences dream-like trances in which she begins having premonitions of future events.

Around the evening camp fire, with Tara resting in her tent, Jake tells a ghost story of the empty children's home nearby, and of a violent sadistic monk who survived an assault by one of his charges, as revenge for killing his twin brother. Overhearing this causes Tara to have premonitions of the murders of her friends.

After a deathly row with his girlfriend and the others, aggressive jock Bluto drinks some of the hallucinogenic tea (supposedly for all to share in the morning) and experiences a trip which culminates in his murder, seemingly at the hands of the rogue monk from the children's home.

The following morning, unconcerned by Bluto's disappearance – the others consume the mushroom tea, only to become separated from one another in the woods while under its effects. The three women, arguing and squabbling, get lost until they themselves are split, and Holly and Lisa are violently murdered – in accordance with Tara's continuing visions – after an encounter with local woodsmen Ernie and Bernie.

Jake and Troy find Tara on the bank of a river, and tell her to meet them in the abandoned home to summon help. Upon investigating the property, Troy is apparently killed by the monk, and Jake escapes by jumping from a high window, breaking his leg as he lands. Tara finds him and the two flee the haunted scene. Then, while resting his leg, he is murdered.

Tara awakes as a Garda helicopter hovers over the camp, and is dispatched into an ambulance as the sole survivor. As her mobile phone rings, she experiences a rapid flashback and realizes that the death bell mushroom caused her to murder all of her friends. She asks the paramedic for help. Everything becomes quiet until we see her bloody hands holding a pair of bloody scissors which suggests that she has killed the paramedic. The film ends with Tara running in the woods.

Cast[]

Production[]

An Irish and Danish co-production,[citation needed] Shrooms was shot over a period of seven weeks in April and May 2006 in locations including Gosford Park, County Armagh, Northern Ireland[3] and Rossmore Forest Park in County Monaghan, Ireland.[4]

Reception[]

When Shrooms was released, it was opened to generally negative reviews. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gave it a rating of 22% based on 18 reviews from critics.[5] But it has since received a cult following by horror enthusiasts.

Derek Elly of Variety described the film as "A shake-'n'-bake slasher movie that shows just how difficult it is to do effective, modestly budgeted horror".[6]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
  2. ^ Eater of Entrails (11 February 2008). "SHROOMS at OMGhorror". Retrieved 5 March 2008.
  3. ^ "Breathnach & Huston On Spine Chiller 'Shrooms' | The Irish Film & Television Network". www.iftn.ie. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  4. ^ "Celebrating Northern Ireland's Most Spooky Films". Culture Night Belfast. 30 October 2020. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  5. ^ Shrooms Review @ Rotten Tomatoes
  6. ^ Elley, Derek (22 August 2007). "Shrooms Review". Variety. Retrieved 28 February 2008.

External links[]

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