Sole Survivor | |
Director: | Thom Eberhardt |
Producer: | Don Barkemeyer |
Starring: |
|
Music: | David F. Anthony |
Cinematography: | Russell Carpenter |
Editing: | Thom Eberhardt |
Studio: | R. & C. Larkey |
Distributor: | International Film Marketing |
Country: | United States |
Runtime: | 85 minutes |
Language: | English |
Sole Survivor is a 1984 American horror film written and directed by Thom Eberhardt, in his feature film debut. The film received mixed reviews.
TV commercial producer, Denise (Anita Skinner), emerges unscathed as the sole survivor of an airliner crash. However, she feels as if she is about to be "caught" by something. She flirts with the doctor, Brian (Kurt Johnson), at the hospital, who is convinced that she is simply experiencing "survivor's syndrome". Denise also receives ambiguous warnings from psychic ex-actress Carla (Caren Larkey) who predicted the crash. A series of strange sightings and encounters of zombie-like people escalates until it is apparent that something is trying to kill her. Brian, who has become romantically involved with Denise, does not believe her.[1]
Plagued by night fears as well as a series of near-miss accidents, Denise confides in her friend and neighbor, Kristy (Robin Davidson) about what is happening. Denise theorizes that she escaped her fate by surviving the plane crash and all of the strange events occurring are because she has to meet the death she dodged. Kristy is skeptical.
After Denise falls asleep on the couch, Kristy enters Denise's house, intending to entertain herself. A man breaks into Denise's house and kills Kristy by drowning her. Denise walks in afterwards and barely escapes the man. Upon calling the police, they question her and cannot find Kristy's body. They tell her that the man she saw is dead and has been for days. Brian talks with his pathologist friend Artie (William Snare) who tells him about irregular discoveries in several recently deceased people (which include a little girl, a homeless man, as well as the man that attempted to kill Denise). They all had lividity from their blood draining into their legs as if they had been walking around after death. Brian begins to believe that Denise might be telling the truth.
Meanwhile, the undead Kristy murders a taxi driver who stops for her, and both of them attempt to kill Denise the following evening in her house. Brian arrives with a gun to protect Denise, but he is stabbed and killed by the undead Kristy. Denise manages to escape from her house and drives through the nearby city, but the car breaks down and she finds herself alone on the streets. Frightened, Denise manages to board a bus and goes to Carla's house with Brian's gun. She confides in Carla about what is going on and asks for help. But Carla, who has not spoken a word since Denise arrived at her house, takes the gun, revealing herself to be also undead, having committed suicide earlier by slashing her wrists. She shoots Denise, killing her.
In the final scene, Artie is at the morgue with the bodies of Denise, Brian, Carla, Kristy, and the taxi driver. Artie continues to be puzzled at how the blood in the bodies of the last three corpses drained into their legs. After talking to a skeptical police detective over the phone about the uncanny irregularities, Artie begins to type out a report to document this. One of the bodies sits up on its gurney behind him. Hearing the sound, he turns around just as the movie ends.
The film was given a limited release theatrically in the United States by International Film Marketing in March 1984. Vestron Video released it on VHS in 1985.[2]
The film was released on DVD in the United States by Code Red DVD in 2008.[3]
Tristan Sinns of Dread Central rated it 4/5 stars and compared it positively to the Final Destination film series.[4] Tom Becker of DVD Verdict called it "a chilly and effective little creeper" that pre-dates Final Destination.[5] Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle called it "essentially a reworking of the classic Carnival of Souls" with zombies.[6] Erich Kuersten from Acidemic Journal of Film and Media awarded the film 3.5 out of 4 stars, commending the film's atmosphere, and characterizations; comparing the writer/director positively to John Carpenter.[7]
Bill Gibron of DVD Talk rated it 2.5/5 stars and wrote that the film's slow pace causes it to be dull.[8] TV Guide awarded the film 1 out of 5 stars, calling it "dull".[9]
. The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia. Peter Dendle. McFarland & Company. 2001. 164–165. 978-0-7864-9288-6.