The World After Thermonuclear War It happened. The earth is dying. And to save humanity, a select few are left in a specially made bunker. People are left alone with each other, their sorrows and expectations. They are saved from the consequences of the disaster, but the disaster is near them. And it's not just about attacking humans bats that live in shelter. The problem lies in the psyche of the people themselves.
Enclosed space. The consequences of a catastrophe or the peculiarities of the human psyche involve something that causes people to suffer, to seek salvation. . This leads to the fact that people see in their salvation a conspiracy to kill them.
Sutton Rowley made an intense horror film in which the psychology of human destructiveness takes up the entire narrative space. It turns out to be more powerful and hints at such traditional subgenres as vampire films, nuclear war or conspiracy theories. Alas, the second half of the tape is lubricated. Having indicated a bright topic and a good subtext, the director could not clearly paint a philosophical parable. It turned out only indistinct psychological thriller, leading us eventually to conspiracy.
A year later, in his film about a yacht in the Bermuda Triangle, “The Satanic Triangle,” he talked about essentially the same thing, but in a mystical subtext.
4 out of 10