Bachelor Games

Bachelor Games

Promotional poster
Directed by Edward McGown
Produced by Georgina Edwards
Written by Sam Michell, Chris Hill
Starring
Music by David Julyan
Cinematography Lucio Bonelli
Edited by Kate Coggins
Production
companies
  • Strike Films
  • Lex Filmed Entertainment
Release dates
  • 8 July 2016 (2016-07-08)
Country
  • United Kingdom
  • Argentina
Language English

Bachelor Games (originally titled 'Rules of the Game') is an English-language horror comedy[1] film directed by British director Edward McGown[2] and produced by Strike Films' Georgina Edwards.[3] The film was shot on location in foothills of the Andes in Cafayate in north west Argentina. It stars Charlie Bewley,[4] Jack Gordon, Jack Doolan, Mike Noble and Obi Abili. Won Best Feature at Halloweenapalooza 2016.[5]

Plot

Henry (Gordon) is getting married and heads to Argentina with his best mates for an epic bachelor party trip.[6] Henry and his best man, Leon (Bewley), and close friends Roy (Noble) and Terence (Doolan) arrive at a remote village in the foothills of the Andes and are surprised to find Henry's buddy Max (Abili) is already there. Amongst the drunken antics of the five boys something is wrong - Max seems unhinged and there warnings from the locals about a mysterious figure known as 'The Hunter'.[7] The next morning they head out on a trek into the mountains that nobody really wants to go on. Tempers fray, old arguments reemerge and soon Terence storms off.[6] The group soon find a bloody shirt but it is unclear what has happened. But not everything is as it seems and soon an elaborate scheme for revenge goes horribly awry.[8]

Development

Bachelor Games is based on a Strike's 2009 short The Rules of the Game[2] starring Christopher Harper[9] which played at Cannes Short Film Corner.[2]

Cast

Crew

Bachelor Games is director Edward McGown's feature debut. McGown is a graduate of the MPA film program at Columbia University in New York, where he was awarded the FMI Fellowship for directing. His short Out There won the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures Student Award and his other shorts have played at various festivals including Cannes, Edinburgh and Palm Springs. He also directed episodes of Hollyoaks and Sugar Rush. The film is scored by Christopher Nolan's former collaborator David Julyan[10] (Momento, Insomnia and The Prestige).

Awards

Won Best Feature winner at Halloweenapalooza Film Festival and was an official selection at World Horror Con Film Festival[5] and Green Bay Film Festival.[11]

Release

Gravitias Ventures will release the film on digital platforms on 8 July 2016.[1]

Reception

Described as "The Hangover meets The Hills Have Eyes with a Shyamalan-esque twist" by Back to the Movies[5] and "a good thriller that had a supernatural edge to it" by Forbidden Planet.[12]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.