| 'Outpost'
Reviewed by Martin McGrath
Outpost
has almost every element necessary to make a successful low
budget horror movie. It has a strong cast but it’s
made up of actors whose faces you’ll recognise but whose
names will mostly escape you. It has a confined and atmospheric
location – an underground bunker supposedly in Eastern
Europe abandoned by the SS at the end of World War II. And
it has a tense, and smartly directed, opening forty-five minutes
as the supposedly easy mission starts to go disastrously wrong.
DC (Ray Stevenson) leads a team of mercenaries into an Eastern
European forest. Their job is to find a bunker, secure the
mysterious technology it contains and to hold it until back-up
arrives. DC’s team is made up of a rag-bag of foreign
soldiers – the brash American, the tough Brit, the silent
Eastern European – but there’s a genuine chemistry
in the combinations and a well-worked sense of a team of professionals
coming together to get a job done.
However, things in the bunker suddenly start to go badly
wrong. There’s a pile of bodies, one of which appears
to be alive. A sniper attack turns the occupation of the bunker
into a siege. Then the lights start to flicker and mercenaries
start to die.
At
this point Outpost had the opportunity to deliver
a truly memorable and effective horror film – but either
the director (Steve Barker) or the writer (Rae Brunton) made
a serious mistake and threw away a lot of their good work.
As the film unfolds it becomes clear that the Nazis who had
occupied this bunker had developed some extraordinary technology
but that its effects had been terrifying. Turning the guards
into undead monsters, trapped by the machinery and unable
to leave the vicinity of the bunker, but implacably evil.
“You cannot kill what is already dead” –
the poster for Outpost proclaims, and this gives
us an insight to the film’s greatest weakness. These
bad guys are unstoppable – they have extraordinary powers
(apparently able to teleport into sealed rooms) and strength
that suggest that they could wipe out the mercenaries in seconds.
That they choose not to is only reasonably explained by the
needs of the writer and director to stretch the story over
90 minutes. And once we realise these monsters are unstoppable
the tension drains from the film as it becomes obvious there’s
no possible escape for DC and his team and the only question
is how they’ll all die.
Outpost is a missed opportunity, but it has moments
of genuine strength, a good cast and it is certainly worth
viewing as a too rare example of a straight British horror
that devotes an unusual amount of time to character and performance.

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