Alone in the Dark (2005 film)

Alone in the Dark

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Uwe Boll
Produced by Uwe Boll
Wolfgang Herold
Shawn Williamson
Written by Elan Mastai
Michael Roesch
Peter Scheerer
Based on Alone in the Dark
by Infogrames
Starring Christian Slater
Tara Reid
Stephen Dorff
Music by Reinhard Besser
Oliver Lieb
Bernd Wendlandt
Peter Zweier
Cinematography Mathias Neumann
Edited by Richard Schwadel
Production
company
Distributed by Concorde Filmverleih (Germany)
Lions Gate Films (US)
Release dates
  • 28 January 2005 (2005-01-28) (United States)
  • 24 February 2005 (2005-02-24) (Germany)
Running time
96 minutes
Country Canada
Germany
United States
Language English
Budget $20 million[1]
Box office $10.4 million[1]

Alone in the Dark is a 2005 Canadian-German-American action horror film loosely based on the fourth installment of Infogrames' video game series of the same name. Directed by Uwe Boll, the film stars Christian Slater as supernatural detective Edward Carnby (the main character in the games), Tara Reid as the scientist assisting him, and Stephen Dorff as the government operative who joins forces with them.

The film was a critical and commercial failure, and is widely considered one of the worst films ever made. Despite this, a sequel was released in 2008.[2]

Plot synopsis

Edward Carnby (Slater) is a detective who specializes in the occult & other paranormal subjects. He was apparently the subject of strange experiments when he was a child, leaving him with heightened abilities as well as a "sixth sense" that allows him to sense the paranormal. Throughout the film, we also learn that Carnby used to work for Bureau 713, a secret government organization that seeks to protect the world from paranormal dangers.

In his spare time, Carnby investigates the disappearance of the Abkani, an ancient Mayan-like civilization that worshipped demonic creatures from another dimension. Central to the plot are several artifacts un-earthed in 1967 and now on display at the city's Museum of Natural History, at which Carnby's ex-girlfriend Aline (Reid) is the assistant curator. While working on a missing-child case, Carnby soon finds himself investigating the very scientist who conducted experiments on him as a child. He also finds himself working with Aline and former protégé (now rival) Commander Burke, his replacement at Bureau 713, to stop an invasion of the Alien-like demonic creatures who are pouring through a portal opened by the Abkani artifacts.

Cast

Connections to the game

Alternative versions

Alternate script

Blair Erickson came up with the first drafts of the script for Alone in the Dark. According to Erickson, Uwe Boll changed the script to be more action packed than a thriller. Erickson stated his disgust and his working relationship towards Boll on Somethingawful.com.

The original script took the Alone In the Dark premise and depicted it as if it were actually based on a true story of a private investigator in the northeastern U.S. whose missing persons cases begin to uncover a disturbing paranormal secret. It was told through the eyes of a writer following Edward Carnby and his co-worker for a novel, and depicted them as real-life blue-collar folks who never expected to find hideous beings waiting for them in the dark. We tried to stick close to the H. P. Lovecraft style and the low-tech nature of the original game, always keeping the horror in the shadows so you never saw what was coming for them.

Thankfully Dr. Boll was able to hire his loyal team of hacks to crank out something much better than our crappy story and add in all sorts of terrifying horror movie essentials like opening gateways to alternate dimensions, bimbo blonde archaeologists, sex scenes, mad scientists, slimy dog monsters, special army forces designed to battle slimy CG dog monsters, Tara Reid, "Matrix" slow-motion gun battles, and car chases. Oh yeah, and a ten-minute opening back story scroll read aloud to the illiterate audience, the only people able to successfully miss all the negative reviews. I mean hell, Boll knows that's where the real scares lie.[3]

Home Media

The film was released on DVD on May 10, 2005.

Unrated Director's Cut

An Unrated Director's Cut was released in Germany, France, and Australia and was #1 on the German DVD market for three weeks.[4] It was released on DVD in North America on 25 September 2007.[5] In the newest version of the film, virtually all of the scenes with Tara Reid in them have been removed by Boll himself.[6]

Original film and game tie-in concept

Originally, the film version of Alone in the Dark was to be released with Alone in the Dark 5, the fifth title in the series; however, the creators of Alone in the Dark, Eden Games, delayed the game and reworked it entirely from scratch. This appears to be one of the causes for the public backlash from gamers on how the film version of Alone in the Dark appeared to deviate from the Alone in the Dark game franchise save for the fact that the film was in some ways a sequel to Alone in the Dark: The New Nightmare. Uwe Boll stated his disappointment on the region 1 DVD commentary but also said that Atari had face shots of Christian Slater for the newest game - Alone in the Dark 5, which was released on June 26, 2008.

Reception

Box office

Alone in the Dark grossed $2,834,421 in its opening weekend, ranking at #12; by the end of its run, the film had grossed $10,442,808 and was a box office bomb, considering its $20 million budget.[1]

Critical response

Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a rating of 1% based on 117 reviews, and the site's Critical Consensus reads, "Inept on almost every level, Alone in the Dark may not work as a thriller, but it's good for some head-slapping, incredulous laughter."[7] At Metacritic, it has a score of 9/100. Many reviewers harshly criticized the awful acting, several plot holes, a near complete lack of connection to the video games, and the poor quality of the special effects. Numerous editing mistakes were also highlighted, such as a scene showing a female soldier killed, only for her to lift her head once the camera crew moves away. Several also slammed the long introduction text. Scott Brown of Entertainment Weekly gave the film an F grade, commenting that the film was "so bad it's postmodern."[8]

In one of the film's only positive reviews, Michelle Alexandria of Eclipse Magazine wrote "Alone in the Dark isn't going to set the world on fire, but it largely succeeds with what it has to work with. Just don't take it seriously and you'll have a fun time."[9]

Awards and nominations

Award Subject Nominee Result
Stinkers Bad Movie Awards Worst Picture Alone in the Dark Won
Worst Actress Tara Reid Won
Worst Special Effects Won
Worst Song "Wish I Had an Angel" (Nightwish) Nominated
Worst Director Uwe Boll Won
Golden Raspberry Awards Nominated
Worst Actress Tara Reid Nominated

Soundtrack

Alone in the Dark: Music from and Inspired by Alone in the Dark
Soundtrack album by Various artists
Released January 25, 2005 (2005-01-25)[10]
Genre Heavy metal
Length 151:47[10]
Label Nuclear Blast
Producer All Shall Perish, Matt Bayles, Rob Caggiano, Steve Carr, Andy Classen, Jean-Francois Dagenais, Brian Joseph Dobbs, Dying Fetus, Patrick W. Engel, Steve Evetts, Fear Factory, Robert Flynn, Jacob Hansen, Tuomas Holopainen, TeeCee Kinnunen, Meshuggah, Misery Index, Fredrik Nordström, Zack Ohren, Eric Rachel, Nick Raskulinecz, Samael, Ben Schigel, Andy Sneap, Waldemar Sorychta, Patrik J. Sten, Peter Tägtgren, Devin Townsend, Paul Trust, Zeuss[10]

The 2-disc soundtrack was released by Nuclear Blast, with Wolfgang Herold as executive producer. The German band Solution Coma's contribution was the title song. Finnish symphonic metal band Nightwish had a music video of "Wish I Had an Angel" directed by Uwe Boll, with clips from the film.

Disc 1
  1. Dimmu Borgir - Vredesbyrd
  2. Shadows Fall - What Drives the Weak
  3. Fear Factory - Cyberwaste
  4. In Flames - Touch of Red
  5. Strapping Young Lad - Devour
  6. Agnostic Front - Peace
  7. God Forbid - Gone Forever
  8. Chimaira - Down Again
  9. Dark Tranquillity - Lost to Apathy
  10. Exodus - Blacklist
  11. Machine Head - Imperium
  12. Soilwork - Stabbing the Drama
  13. Lacuna Coil - Daylight Dancer
  14. The Dillinger Escape Plan - Panasonic Youth
  15. Meshuggah - Rational Gaze
  16. Nightwish - Wish I Had an Angel
  17. Cradle of Filth - Mother of Abominations
Disc 2
  1. Arch Enemy - Dead Eyes See No Future
  2. Death Angel - The Devil Incarnate
  3. Diecast - Medieval
  4. Fireball Ministry - Daughter of the Damned
  5. Heaven Shall Burn - The Weapon They Fear
  6. Hypocrisy - Eraser
  7. Mastodon - Blood and Thunder
  8. Misery Index - The Great Depression
  9. Mnemic - Ghost
  10. Dew-Scented - Slaughtervain
  11. Suffocation - Souls to Deny
  12. Raunchy - Watch Out
  13. Kataklysm - As I Slither
  14. Bloodbath - Outnumbering the Day
  15. All Shall Perish - Deconstruction
  16. Bleed the Sky - Minion
  17. Samael - On Earth
  18. Dying Fetus - One Shot, One Kill
  19. The Haunted - 99
  20. Deathstars - Synthetic Generation

See also

References

External links

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