20 Feet Below: The Darkness Descending

Film poster
Directed by Marc Clebanoff
Produced by
Written by Frank Krueger
Based on The Darkness Descending
by Marc Clebanoff
Starring
Music by Ben Zarai
Cinematography
  • Lan Bui
  • Vu Bui
Edited by Austin Anderson
Production
company
  • Odyssey Motion Pictures
  • Blue Dragon Entertainment
Distributed by Vertical Entertainment
Release dates
Running time
95 minutes
Country United States
Language English

20 Feet Below: The Darkness Descending (also Redemption: The Darkness Descending) is a 2013 American horror film directed by Marc Clebanoff, written by Frank Krueger, and starring Danny Trejo, Kinga Philipps, and Krueger. Philipps plays a documentary filmmaker who enters abandoned New York City Subway tunnels to film a documentary on the homeless people who live there, which include an ex-cop (Krueger) and cult leader (Trejo). The film is based on an earlier web series by Clebanoff.

Plot

Documentary filmmaker Chelsea enters the abandoned New York City Subway tunnels that homeless squatters use. Cops Smitty and Lockeheed warn her to be careful, but she dismisses their concerns. There, she befriends and interviews Skeeter, who leads her on a tour. Skeeter introduces her to Jake, an ex-cop who has become self-destructive since his wife's murder; Gabriel, a former social worker; Harmony, an artist; Razor and Ajax, gang members; Flash and Alexis, orphaned twins; and, at her insistence, Angel, the leader of a cult-like, violent anarchist gang. Angel plans a revolution against the surface world, whom he blames for persecuting the homeless. After he offhandedly threatens to murder to Chelsea as a show of power, Angel releases her and tells her to warn the surface world of his wrath.

Instead of fleeing, Chelsea stays behind and records a hazing ritual performed by Angel's gang. When Ajax discovers her, Jake rescues Chelsea, drawing the further ire of the gang, who promise retaliations against both of them. The increased gang activity, including the murder of a Wall Street investor, draws the attention of the cops, who organize a sweep through the tunnels. Lockeheed's aggressive behavior during the raid culminates in a violent confrontation with Jake. As Smitty defuses the situation, the gang quietly abducts a young and idealistic cop named Jimmy. Angel sets fire to Jake's home and mounts Jimmy's bloody body nearby as a warning. Chelsea and Gabriel rescue Jake, and they attempt to help Jimmy, who is already dead.

Above ground, Smitty and Lockeheed argue over Jake and return to the tunnels to interrogate him about Jimmy, who has been reported missing. When Lockeheed finds Jake next to Jimmy's dead body, Smitty is no longer able to hold him back. Jake flees deeper into the tunnels, where he receives conflicting advice from Gabriel and Flash. Gabriel advises him to avoid violence, and Flash urges him to confront Angel. When Ajax fails to kill Flash and instead gets beaten, Angel kills Ajax. Angel then sends his gang out to set bombs in the subway tunnels, and Jake forces Skeeter to lead him to Angel's lair, which is hidden in the deepest, maze-like tunnels. Jake attempts to stop Razor from setting a bomb, but it explodes, derails a subway train, and brings further police activity in the tunnels.

Razor and Jake fight each other; when Lockeheed shoots Jake in the arm, Razor and Jake both flee into the tunnels. Angel's gang wounds Flash as they kidnap Chelsea. Smitty arrests Jake, but Jake convinces Smitty to let him go so that he can rescue Chelsea. When Jake reaches Angel, he discovers that Angel has planned his own death so that he will become a legend to his followers. Smitty and Lockeheed, who have reconciled, converge with the rest of the homeless people on Angel's lair, and they join Chelsea in attempting to stop Jake from killing Angel. Sensing Jake's reluctance, Angel reveals that he was the one who killed Jake's wife. At the last minute, Jake accepts Gabriel's advice and chooses to forgo violence and revenge. Smitty and Lockeheed arrest Angel and lead him away.

Cast

Production

20 Feet Below was based on director Clebanoff's 2009 web series The Darkness Descending.[2]

Release

20 Feet Below premiered at a fan launch party on July 20, 2013, at the San Diego Comic Con.[1] Vertical Entertainment released the film on video on March 18, 2014.[3]

Reception

Martin Hafer of Influx Magazine rated it D+ and said that it "gets the mood right" but "leaves a lot to be desired when it comes to the characters, their motivations and the dialog."[4] Mark L. Miller of Ain't It Cool News called it "predictable, passably to painfully acted, and dull in parts."[5] HorrorNews.Net wrote, "The script is essentially one cliché after another strung together until they approximate something you might run into on the Lifetime channel".[2]

References

  1. 1 2 Mendoza, Mariecar (2013-07-17). "Comic-Con: Freaks come out at night for growing party scene". Pasadena Star-News. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  2. 1 2 "Film Review: 20 ft. Below: The Darkness Descending (2014)". HorrorNews.Net. 2014-02-19. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  3. Barton, Steve (2014-01-23). "Danny Trejo Heads 20 Feet Below for Probably About 5 Minutes". Dread Central. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  4. Hafer, Martin (2014-03-18). "20 Ft Below: The Darkness Descending". Influx Magazine. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
  5. Miller, Mark L. (2014-03-21). "20 FEET BELOW: THE DARKNESS DESCENDING (2014)". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved 2014-05-25.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/16/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.