Thursday, June 14, 2012

Chernobyl Diaries


Chernobyl Diaries (Rated R)

  • Starring Jesse McCartney, Jonathan Sadowski, Olivia Dudley, Nathan Phillips, Devin Kelley, Dimitri Diatchenko, Ingrid Bolsø Berdal
  • Directed by Bradley Parker


I had high hopes for this one, as the creepy trailer made it seem like a solid entry in what has been a less than stellar year for horror so far. 

A group of American tourists visiting Russia ends up going on an “extreme tour” to visit the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.  While not my cup of tea, I was willing to forgive this stretch or plausibility.  After a fun (?) day of sightseeing, the van won’t start and, of course, no one knows they’re there.  Well, except for the remaining townsfolk who are now mutants.

Starring a likable enough cast, we’re never given any to get to know them, so by the time they finally start getting knocked off one-by-one, we don’t really care.  The movie also fails to successfully build any sort of suspense at all.

Instead, we’re treated from one horror movie cliché to another – red herrings, a car that won’t start, an uninspired threat, and a predictable procession of bodies.

Oren Peli wrote this film, and to be honest, I expect a little more from the guy who gave us the Paranormal Activity series.

Chernobyl Diaries is one step above the typical direct-to-DVD horror that floods the video shelves and Redbox machines each week.  Skip it in the theater, and maybe give it a viewing when it hits those venues.

1 comment:

  1. FYI: If you would like an easy-to-read look at the real Chernobyl tragedy (who wouldn't?), there are a few chapters in my novel "Rad Decision" which tell the story in a way that allows a lay person to folllow along and understand what the real problems were. The book is free online (no advertisements or sponsors) at http://RadDecision.blogspot.com , with the Chernobyl section linked at the homepage. I work in the US nuclear industry, which I suppose gives me some credibility for explaining this.

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