The Other Side (2005)
Facts
| Directed by | Gregg Bishop |
| Cast | Nathan Mobley, Jaimie Alexander and Cory Rouse |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2004 |
| DVD Release | October 2, 2007 |
| Running Time | 12 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 783722274286 |
| Buy this item | $26.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 20 18:53 EST (details) 1 DVD, Allumination, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language) Or 10 new from $6.07, 14 used from $3.25, 1 collectible from $33.99 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Great indie action-adventure/thriller |
This is a clever, well-acted movie with memorable characters. The pacing is just right with revelations coming at intervals, a bit of humor, and a hero that grows in understanding about his role and duty in the spiritual scheme of things.
This is a satisfying story. Highly recommended. April 23, 2008
| Awesome! |
| LOW BUDGET BUT HIDES IT WELL |
Sam (Nathan Mobley) is returning home from college early as a surprise to his girlfriend Hanna. They've made a date that afternoon at their favorite spot in the woods next to a waterfall. Sam waits and waits but Hanna never shows up. Just as he's about to leave to go and find her, a pickup truck slams into Sam's car, forcing him over a ravine and to his death. Sam awakes in a terrifying environment...a dank, dark place, which surely must be Hell. Two others grab Sam and force him out of the Pit. Oz and Mally are two other condemned souls who have escaped Hell on more than one occasion, and are set on trying to redeem themselves and get into Heaven. But Hell does not give up its souls so easily.
They send three unstoppable killers after the escaped souls. These reapers are almost un-killable. Kill them and they just jump into the nearest dead body and once again pursue the trio. Only be killing them far enough away from and possible host bodies can send the Reapers back to hell. Sam not only has to avoid the Reapers but he must find out what happened to Hanna, and who murdered him.
The Other Side is a well-made film technically. Too often low budget films try to pull off special effects and make-up and it just comes off looking bad. Director Gregg Bishop knows the limitations he has in terms of money and thus forgoes futile attempts, concentrating more on character development and plot. This fact alone make the Other Side better than many other low-budget horrors. While inexperienced, the cast does a credible job. They seem comfortable and deliver their lines in earnest. You might recognize Jaimie Alexander from another recent horror film, Rest Stop, which wasn't nearly as good as The Other Side.
The film does have it's weaknesses...the mystery of what happened to Hanna and who killed Sam is pretty easy to guess early on. Also, it was a little too cute that whenever the female reaper got killed, the body of another young Goth chick, who dresses in black, was always readily available. I would have preferred to see their looks completely change with each new body they possessed.
Solid film and worth a rent.
REVIEWED BY TIM JANSON November 9, 2007
| Sam has to rescue the woman he loves before Reapers drag him back to Hell |
Writer-director Gregg Bishop supposed made this 2006 film guerilla-style for $15,000 in Atlanta, and by that standard the results are pretty impressive. While watching the film I was wondering why they seemed to always being filming during the day time and not having the money to shoot at night, or on real sets, or with lots of special effects, would pretty much explain it. That being said, it is ironic that "The Other Side" reminded me of "The Matrix," but that would be in regards to the basic situation: guy who thinks he is normal discovers he is in a different "world" where there are sides and strange stuff happening. Ironically I had watched the pilot for Kevin Smith's "Reapers" on television a couple of weeks ago, and I was a devotee of the Grim Reapers on Dead Like Me, but none of them would stand a chance against Bishop's Reapers. There is a limited amount of blood and gore here, because the emphasis is more on action, which explains why I want to think of "The Other Side" as being much more of a supernatural thriller than a horror film. Plus there is a great little gag involving those Neighborhood Watch signs.
I had some concerns over the basic situation here once the rules of the game were laid out, but I took all of that with a grain of salt because I picked up on the fact that there were clearly things we did not know that would better explaining what is going on. That indeed proves to be the case, but they are not predictable things that you can figure out before they are sprung. What Bishop has going for him in "The Other Side" is that he takes his story and runs with it; things are always moving in this film and that forgives a lot of faults, especially when the cast commits to what they are being asked to do. I admire the effort more than I enjoyed the results, but there is much to be said for a film where the problem is the production's lack of money rather than a lack of brains by the people controlling the creative process. When you think of all the low-budget dreck you have seen in your life, especially in the horror genre, this little independent film helps restore your faith that there are people out there who can do a lot with a little. October 17, 2007
| Fear The Reapers |
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