Day, The (2011) [Blu-ray]
Drama | Horror | Sci-Fi | Thriller

Tagline: Fight. Or die.

Fight. Or Die. A group of five survivors, armed with shotguns, axes and machetes, wander the back roads of a dismantled landscape looking for refuge in The Day, a terrifying look into post-apocalyptic future. As war ravages humanity, destroying civilization and most of life on Earth, the survivors realize they must do whatever it takes to stay alive. Lost, starving, and exhausted, they seek shelter in a seemingly safe abandoned farmhouse. However, while searching for food and recourses, they unwittingly set off a trap signaling to their ruthless predators lying in wait to begin their deadly attack. With food and ammunition dwindling, the group must make a desperate final stand - over a 24-hour period - battling for the ultimate survival. Starring Shawn Ashmore (X-Men), Ashley Bell (The Last Exorcism), Michael Eklund (The Divide), Cory Hardict (Gran Torino, Battle: Lost Angeles), Dominic Monaghan (ABC's Lost, Lord Of The Rings Trilogy) and Shannyn Sossamon (A Knight's Tale).

Storyline: This film is set in the near future in a post-apocalyptic time with five survivors struggling to get through each day. They are on the move to find food and other survivors as well as a safe place to hold up for a while. They stumble across a dilapidated house in the country, so they check it out when things turn bad. The house is not as safe as they hoped, and there are other people who have morbid uses for them. Will they survive? Written by Michael Hallows Eve

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman on November 26, 2012 -- I just wait to die.

A WWE Films production with no wrestlers? A mega-corporation takes a big step -- but not so much of a big risk -- with The Day, a drained and dour end-of-times tale about a group of survivors battling another collection of survivors because, well, that's what people do in the apocalypse, apparently, especially when they're hungry. For anyone who hasn't been paying attention, doom and gloom and end times are all the rage these days, be it in the form of zombies, economic collapse, war, the Mayan calendar, name-any-upheaval. End times is making ends meet for countless outlets, whether Hollywood pictures, gun shops, or preparedness merchants. Perhaps what's so interesting about tales of survival and togetherness in the most challenging of times is that they can inspire or disgust in a flash, separately or even together at once. The Day does a little bit of both, but mostly hones in on the latter by painting a fairly hopeless picture wrought with gloom and violence and mistrust and broken relationships. It's not as intense as The Divide or as unforgettably polished and dreary as The Road, but The Day works as a serviceable film and a worthwhile dosage of doom and gloom for anyone interested in a little dispirit in their lives.

Five survivors -- Adam (Shawn Ashmore), Rick (Dominic Monaghan), Henson (Cory Hardrict), Mary (Ashley Bell), and Shannon (Shannyn Sossamon) -- travel a deserted road across a barren wasteland in a devastated, worn-down post-apocalyptic landscape. Their numbers have dwindled, their exact location is uncertain, food supplies are short, and they're down to a mere 41 rounds of ammunition amongst them. Rick believes in the future; the group does carry two large jars of seeds, and he feels they need only find a safe and secluded spot from which they can settle down and create a new life. They stumble upon a farm house and choose to hunker down for the night. Henson is battling an illness from which he may not recover. The men settle into the house while Shannon and the mysterious Mary search the grounds outside. Adam and Rick make a shocking discovery in the basement: dozens -- maybe hundreds -- of cans of food. Unfortunately, an unexpected twist puts them all in danger and leaves them facing a horde of dedicated survivalists who will do anything to secure their next meal.

It's a little disconcerting to see the WWE logo but not see a John Cena or a Steve Austin in the lead role, at least for a moment. When The Day breaks and the gloominess pours into the theater, it quickly becomes clear that this isn't exactly the sort of film that calls for a musclebound hero to save the day, to shred enemies with the same intensity he shreds his muscles, to waste bad guys with bullets as big as his biceps. The everyman look, the worn down, grimy, hungry, tired, and frightened nobodies that populate the film is half of what makes it work. They make the movie relatable, which in the end of times seems to be most of the point. It allows the average viewer to place himself or herself in a decidedly not average situation, to deal with the dilemmas, to face the fear, to battle the bad guys, to despair in the midst of endless doom. The movie most certainly gets its look and feel down just right to reinforce those ideas, and even if the acting proves a little wooden and robotic at times, the sheer excess of atmosphere masks what little bit of inaccuracy flows into the movie by way of midlevel performances.

Then again, The Day also deals in what is largely a linear story with not much more drama beyond who will kill who. There's a revelation partway through that leads to the film's most intense, stomach-churning scene, but the drama is otherwise limited to generalities as they relate to the survival scenario. It boils down to basic human needs and emotions, the need to live by any means necessary which drives the film though perhaps not in a way one might immediately consider in a safe land of plenty. As the desperation mounts, both the violence and mistrust increase, leading to some intense conflicts both within the group and against another. The Day handles its action with plenty of style and tackles its dramatic conflicts with flair, but it does stumble a bit in its depiction of graphic violence, going rather cheap and making use of unconvincingly blurry and phony digital effects that largely ruin several scenes. Otherwise, the movie gets more right than wrong, even as it plows through the plot with little imagination. This isn't a crowd pleaser sort of movie, but audiences looking for a dose of dire apocalyptic filmmaking will want to spend around ninety minutes with The Day.

The Day won't go down as the great reference end of the world Action movie, but it certainly tackles its niche well enough and delivers a fairly intense moviegoing experience, at least for those who enjoy their movies gray and their futures hopeless. The Day does everything well but nothing so well as to make it all that memorable. Phony digital gore and occasionally bland acting hurt the film, but it's saved by high intensity, a quality atmosphere, and a straightforward, no-frills tale of violence and survival. Anchor Bay's Blu-ray release of The Day is disappointingly short on extras, but the A/V presentation is just fine. Core genre fans will want to pick this one up. Recommended to anyone familiar with the acronym TEOTWAWKI. [The End Of The World As We Know It]

[CSW] -1.4- The story is mediocre at best and seemed to be nothing more than a "brain storm" that never takes fruition. Actions by the characters make little sense, there is little to no purpose for any event in the film. Absolutely no explanation as to why civilization as we know it has ended. The script was so poorly thought out that even with decent actors it turned out to be just plain garbage. Skip this one.
[V4.0-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box.


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