College student Claire Parker (Lauren Currie Lewis) leaves her job at a convenience store, only to be brutally murdered by a stranger. And then she wakes up. Thinking it was a dream, she repeats. Jun 21, 2009 I watched about 25-30 minutes of Salvage on netflix & was out like a light.I woke up, It was still on & I went right back to sleep.1 good thing about Salvage was the beginning.Everything I watched.
Salvage is a 2009 British horror film directed by Lawrence Gough, produced by Julie Lau and written by Colin O'Donnell and Alan Patterson. The film stars Neve McIntosh, Shaun Dooley and Linzey Cocker as residents in a suburban street who find themselves isolated from the outside world following an emergency. The film was one of three produced in Liverpool to celebrate the city's status as EU City of Culture in 2008, and was filmed on the set of former soap opera Brookside.[1] It was produced on a minimal budget, and was the last time the Brookside set was used for filming purposes before it was sold to a private developer. Neve McIntosh won two Best Actress awards for her role in the film.
Plot[edit]
On Christmas Eve morning, a paperboy delivers newspapers in a cul-de-sac. Hearing a row between an Indian couple, he peers through the window, but is spotted and chased away by the man, Mr Sharma (Shahid Ahmed). He flees into the woods behind the street, but is killed by an unknown assailant.
Jodie (Linzey Cocker) is dropped off by her father Clive (Dean Andrews) at her mother's house in the same cul-de-sac to stay for Christmas. Jodie is reluctant as she does not get on with her mother. She finds her mother, Beth (Neve McIntosh) in her room having sex with Kieran (Shaun Dooley). Disgusted, Jodie storms out and stays at her friend Lianne's (Jessica Baglow) house across the street, despite Beth's pleas. Beth argues with Lianne's mother Pam (Debbie Rush) but she will not let her in to see Jodie.
As Beth stands in front of Lianne's house, a team of special forces soldiers appears and order everyone inside. Mr Sharma emerges from his house covered in blood and armed with a knife. As he advances towards the soldiers, he is shot dead. Beth gets back into her house with Kieran and the two hear gunfire outside. A television news report shows a shipping container washed up on a nearby beach. Three bodies were found near it and another further inland. The power then goes off.
A man breaks into the house and attacks them, and after a struggle, Kieran kills him. The man turns out to be Beth's next-door neighbour Peter Davis (Alan Pattison), who had smashed his way in through the communal wall between their lofts. Beth and Kieran enter Peter's house, finding the place trashed and his wife dead. Pam bangs on the door shouting for help, but before they can let her in she is dragged away and killed.
The two see the body of a soldier in Peter's garden and get out to retrieve his radio. The soldier turns out to be alive. They carry the soldier, Akede (Kevin Harvey), inside and tend to his wound. Akede reveals that Mr. Sharma was an al-Qaeda terrorist and the shipping container contained weapons for a terrorist operation. Later, Beth hears Akede talking on his radio saying his team were killed by a creature. As she confronts him, he tells her that the true cause of the chaos is due to an experiment to create a creature to be used as a weapon. It was being carried away for destruction by a helicopter, but the helicopter went down in the sea. The shipping container containing the creature washed up on the beach, and was opened by three drunk teenagers. It killed them and escaped.
At this point the creature appears at the window and starts to force its way in. Beth flees into the loft, but Kieran is dragged down before he can climb up. Beth gets back to her house, but the sergeant major commanding the special forces team (Ray Nicholas) is waiting for her and knocks her unconscious.
Beth wakes up and finds herself tied up and gagged outside, presumably to act as bait. Kieran, badly wounded but still alive, appears and unties her. They attempt to flee, but run into the sergeant major, who stabs Kieran to death. Beth flees into the woods, pursued by the soldiers, and finds the paperboy's body. The creature appears, but does not notice her, and attacks the soldiers.
Beth goes to Lianne's house to find her daughter. She finds Lianne, who tells her that Jodie has gone home. Beth flees the house, narrowly avoiding the soldiers. Gunshots are heard inside, implying that they kill Lianne. Back at her house, Beth finds Jodie, but they are attacked by the creature. Beth manages to stab it to death as it attacks Jodie, but as she stands up and screams in triumph she is shot dead by one of the soldiers. Jodie tries to help her mother while the soldiers freeze in shock.
Cast[edit]
Neve McIntosh as Beth
Shaun Dooley as Kieran
Linzey Cocker as Jodie
Dean Andrews as Clive
Debbie Rush as Pam
Jessica Baglow as Lianne
Kevin Harvey as Akede
Ray Nicholas as the Sergeant Major
Paul Opacic as Corporal Simms
Ben Batt as Trooper Jones
Alan Pattison as Peter Davis
Shahid Ahmed as Mr Sharma
Sufian Ashraf as Mrs Sharma
Jake Norton as Newsreader
Kyle Ward as Paperboy
Martin Pemberton and Paul Howell as Soldiers
The Brookside set, seen here in 2007, was the setting for Salvage.
Production[edit]
Salvage was one of three films produced celebrating Liverpool culture to coincide with the city's status of EU City of Culture in 2008. It was directed by Lawrence Gough.[1]
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Filming for Salvage had begun by March 2008, when the Liverpool Daily Post reported that the set of Brookside Close had been rented to a local production company to use as a production set. The production was a low-budget production titled Salvage.[2] This was the last time the houses of the Brookside set were ever used for production purposes.[2] It was sold to a private developer months later.[3]
Release and reception[edit]
The film received modest reviews following its release, and was not widely distributed. Despite the best efforts of the set designers, some reviewers did comment on its similarity to Brookside Close.[4] Giving it three out of five stars, the magazine Time Out observed that the film had made clever use of the set.[5]
The film, which marked Lawrence Gough's directing debut,[6] won Neve McIntosh an International Fantasy Film Award for Best Actress in 2010,[7] as well as the Award for Best Horror Actress at the Fantastic Fest.[6]
References[edit]
^ ab'Salvage (2009) | Horror Movie, DVD, & Book Reviews, News, Interviews at Dread Central'. Dreadcentral.com. 4 September 2009. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 15 November 2012.
^ ab'Brookside Close becomes set for horror movie'. Liverpool Daily Post. Trinity Mirror. 19 March 2008. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
^Jones, Sam (18 December 2008). 'Brookside sold: Set goes under the hammer for £735,000'. The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
^'Salvage Director Interview - Sky Movies HD'. Movies.sky.com. 18 March 2010. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 15 November 2012.
^Floyd, Nigel (18 March 2010). 'Salvage Review'. Time Out London. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
^ abBentley, David (17 March 2010). 'Neve McIntosh stars in British horror film Salvage released on March 19'. Coventry Telegraph. Trinity Mirror. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 15 November 2012.
^Dale, Martin (7 March 2010). 'Fantasporto honors 'Heartless''. Variety Magazine. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
External links[edit]
Salvage on IMDb
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Salvage_(2009_film)&oldid=992847109'
Living in his car, The Driver spends his days cruising the city, surviving on scraps and charity. Haunted by guilt, he pays no attention to the missing girl all the radio pundits are talking about. Instead he focuses on making money. An ad in a stolen newspaper leads him to a desolate location in a forgotten part of town. There he receives an envelope, along with a time and location to drop it off. The only rule? Do not open the envelope UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. Easy money with plenty of repeat opportunities. Until The Driver misses a deadline and the little girl everyone is looking for suddenly shows up dead. The Driver can’t be sure the two events are related. But he’s spooked enough to stop playing the delivery boy for his faceless employer.Short a job opportunity he’s back to cruising by day and scraping by at night.Then another girl goes missing. And all evidence of his former employer disappears. Feeling responsible for the lost children he’s forced in to a seedy world of kidnapping and ransom. It’s his shot at redemption. And it could cost him his life.