Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Decay

 Science nerds, this text should ring a bell. Image from http://www.decayfilm.com/2012/lhc-sign.html

Decay (2012)
Directed by Luke Thompson

Wow.
The film is acceptable, but the curcumstances surrounding it make it great.

 Image from http://www.decayfilm.com/2012/keep-calm-and-baryon.html

So what happens when living tissue is exposed to the 'God Particle'? This film gives one possible answer.
A problem underground in the LHC is detected. Four students, Amy, Connor, James, and Matt, are sent underground to the Large Hadron Collider's control room to monitor things while a tech team investigates the LHC.
While in the control room something goes horribly wrong and the group has to restart the power by leaving the room, all the while Amy is trying to run simulations on her computer of what will happen to live organisms around the Higgs Boson. Once in the tunnels they begin to hear strange sounds. Something attacks the group. James is bitten. They run for their lives.
The group finds refuge in the server room where they hope to get a message to the outside. They cannot contact the outside, however they do receive the simulation results from Amy's computer in the other room. Radiation from the Higgs Boson is deadly. It kills the brain except for the stem, leaving the affected organism only with primal functions. Kill, and eat. Unfortunately someone with security access on the outside is wiping all the data, erasing his tracks. This couldn't have happened by accident. Someone was willing to send innocent people down just to see what the Higgs Boson woul do. The only good news--Connor found a map.
James becomes exhuasted and 'falls asleep'. When he awakens he's just like the other creatures and attacks Connor. Matt flees, leaving Amy to kill her own brother to save her crush, Connor.
After James is killed, Amy helps a wounded Connor hobble away. In another tunnel they're hunted again and Connor is eaten. Grief-stricken and alone Amy continues. Meanwhile Matt gets attacked by a  bunch of ladies and eaten.
Amy eventually makes it out only to find someone infected got out before her and everyone in sight is infected. Amy seeks shelter inside a professor's office. She knows he has a backup copy of all the data on the 'God Particle', so Amy has to send it out to let the world know.
Behind her a man, the director general of CERN, enters the room aiming a gun at her. He had to let this happen, the research was too important he tells her. Her professor wanted to shut down the LHC, but he couldn't have that. And he can't let her go blabbing. He shoots Amy. Unfortunately for him she's been recording a voicemail to another physicist the whole time, and may or may not have already emailed the data.

Matt following Connor down a tunnel. Image from http://www.decayfilm.com/2012/tunnel-flashlight-2.html

So this is a film you can watch and download for free, as it is made under a Creative Commons license. Pretty cool. It's offered in many different qualities from SD to theatre screening.

Also interesting to mention is the film was made by students and physicists. It's not something made by film students. With that in mind, I'm understanding of the editing decisions. However, as an editor, some of the audio issues and pacing issues could have easily been resolved XP There lots of shot where a character walks past a camera looking down a corridor. If only the shot hung on that empty corridor for a couple extra seconds the tension could have been hugly increased just by giving the audience a chance to think 'Oh noes, something's gonna cast a shadow or start walking down the hall!'

The audio is atrocious. Again if my rocket science peeps showed me a film of this caliber I'd be amazed, but just to be critical from a film person's POV I'm mentioning it. A lot of the audio problems could have been resolved with L cuts in the non-linear editing software. Even running the audio through something like Audacity could have cleaned up a bunch of that white noise which is not consistent from one scene to the next. In some cases the audio was too loud and seemed to peak, in some cases it was too quiet (mostly with dialogue).

There was a lot of nice mood lighting though. I'm not sure if it was just how the tunnels were regularly lit, or if the crew had to do anything special, but that was great. The amount of darkness versus what was visible in each scene was a great balance.

This film was made with an incredibly small budget, making it all the more amazing. These are just some of the circumstances that make this movie great, in spite of technical flaws.

If you enjoy science, if you enjoy b-movies, if you want to see what physicists do for fun, watch this film.

No comments:

Post a Comment