Dying Breed details

Dying Breed
Formats: 18 DVD, Blu-ray
Starring: Bille Brown, Peter Docker, Mirrah Foulkes, Elaine Hudson, Sally McDonald, Nathan Phillips, Ken Radley, Melanie Vallejo, Leigh Whannell
Director: Jody Dwyer
Genres: Horror - Ghosts/Supernatural, Thriller - Mystery
Studio: DNC ENTERTAINMENT
Name Discs
Dying Breed
18 Feature

DVD Information

Run time: 1 hour 32 minutes
Rental release: 28 Sep 2009
Main languages: English
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Most helpful review Dying Breed

  • Backwater Cannibals

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By SpencerHawken (5 reviews) from Cheltenham , 01 Nov 2009

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    Once every while a movie comes along that leaves such a punch in its final moments that its final message outweighs any other aspect of the film.

    New Aussie horror The Dying Breed opens in a rather lengthy way, delivering an insight into four characters without really giving you a shred of information. Geared firmly at the character of Nina who has lots of meaningful moments, flashbacks and visions of events that occurred to her sister in a rural location sometime earlier. The movies characters all have headed to a strange backwater in search of the site of the mysterious Tasmanian Tiger, something that is as great a myth as Bigfoot. While Nina acts all weird and deep, the others all seem to share a mutual dislike for each other forming two parties. But as they feud, they all miss completely the tensions that surround them.

    My opening paragraph may seem a little confused, but to be honest with you it all is pretty much, there are little explanations given as to why people are how they are, or why they behave the way they do; its all done in that way where the movies creators have tried to be on a higher intellectual plain than us mere mortals. The truth of the matter is, despite their best efforts its not very deep at all.

    Now saying this, The Dying Breed is not a bad film, because what it does do is gather a couple of menacing factors and sticks them together. First up you have the issue of the Tasmanian Tiger, a creature that lives in isolation and is only rumored to exist, rumour suggests that the only reason its never been seen is because those that see it are eaten, and logic would tell you that such an illusive animal would be a little on the protective side to protect its lifestyle. The second and far more troubling is that back in the days of Australia being a prison one of the convicts known as Alexander The Pieman escaped and somehow managed to survive for a rather long time, well long enough to create some descendants, clue to his habits revolve around his nickname.

    What you have in The Dying Breed is a good old-fashioned tale of Deliverance style locals and the wonder of cannibalism. The result of which, despite the producers best efforts to make the characters rather unlikeable; is quite a gross out movie offering filled with blood, gore and sometimes worse. Its all actually quite disturbing territory that harks back to the 1980’s video nasty era.

    The punches are the basis of the movies success, because from the moment you enter the second half of the movie your transported into a variety of horrifically unpleasant circumstances, and disturbing visuals. Punch, punch, punch! Once the movie gets going its fairly relentless, characters are dispatched in continuously worse methods as it becomes apparent that the locals are clearly the descendants of The Pieman, and that Nina’s sister undoubtedly had some sort of nasty encounter with these locals.

    The clear difference with this movie is that it packs two very big final punches one of which leads you to a false ending. And if that were not enough the text that appears onscreen just before the credits roll lead you on a wild and furious search online, because the story ends in such a way to make you wonder if the film could in fact be based on some true facts. And quite disturbingly, potentially it is.

    Its grubby looking, broody, its empty on the character building front, but its actually pretty good entertaining viewing. And the sort of thing that keeps you thinking long after the credits roll. If nothing else it will give you some visuals to haunt your mind.
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All reviews

(18)
  • You Will Jump

    Rated - 4.0 stars  
    By JezzDangles (13 reviews) , 03 Apr 2013

    [Highly rated reviewer]

    Loved this horror film more than others i have seen only due to the fact it could happen. If you like film such as Wolf Creek then your love this one. Oh and just when you thought it was gonna end and everyone is safe....WRONG!!
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  • predictable

    Rated - 1.0 star  
    By a customer from Hartlerpool, England , 07 May 2012
    boring, pointless and poorly acted b-move
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  • 3 STARS

    Rated - 3.0 stars  
    By Ant from Worcester , 03 Jan 2012
    Not as good as i was expecting. Thought it might be one one those hidden gems. Worth a watch but wouldnt watch it again.
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  • This will keep you watching

    Rated - 3.5 stars  
    By ricoh (95 reviews) from Calne , 30 Dec 2011
    Very worthwhile viewing if your in the mood for some gory horror. I suopose these type of films have been done before, but theres something about this one that sets it apart from most...and the ending!! WOW.
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  • Slow burner fizzles out

    Rated - 2.0 stars  
    By cptrelentless (33 reviews) from London , 12 Jul 2011
    Although fairly well shot and generally ok to look at the interminably slow and boring beginning fails to deliver a decent spectacular at the end. Sure, there's a bit of gore (nothing really mind blowing) but to get there we waited a long time and were disappointed with some pedestrian acting. Plus a lot of it makes no sense, even taking the internal logic of a Deliverance-style village of inbreds acting as the main vehicle.
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