If I was to tell you that Salvage is written by Hollyoaks
scribe Colin O’Donnell, taking place on and around the set of Brookside Close
in Liverpool, you’d be forgiven for moving onto the next article. Forgiven but
ultimately foolish. Salvage is the debut feature from director Lawrence Gough,
a low budget horror movie that has built up quite the following at festival
screenings, and on DVD it delivers one of the most enjoyable nights in of the
year.
Its Christmas Eve and teenager Jodie (Linzey Cocker) is
travelling to her mother’s house for the holidays. After a blazing row she
storms over to her friend’s house on the other side of the street. Jodie’s
mother Beth (Neve McIntosh) has had company for the night, not that she can
remember his name (Eden Lake’s Shaun Dooley), but still, she wasn’t expecting
her daughter’s arrival until later that day. Things go from bad to worse when a
group of heavily armed military personnel storm the road, ordering the
residents back into their homes at gunpoint.
Undecided on whether it could be a terrorist attack or in
fact something far worse, Beth takes it upon herself to rescue her estranged
daughter on the other side of the street. The residents soon discover that the
situation is more monstrous than they could ever imagine, and violence, terror
and paranoia threaten to tear their worlds apart.
Lawrence Gough has delivered a tense and terrifying low
budget horror movie that successfully mixes current world anxieties with
traditional horror conventions. He teases the audiences with glimpses of fear
and dread, refusing to surrender to his lack of funds and time restraints. The
true horror of Salvage is hidden within the shadows until the final act,
affording the fledgling director the time he needs to play with his emotionally
charged characters.
Neve McIntosh won the Best Actress Award at Fantastic Fest
2009 for her performance as our gutsy heroine. Coming on like a modern day
Ellen Ripley, Neve takes the role of Beth (damaged goods and mother of one) and
turns it into something memorable. Utterly believable throughout, her
performance is powerful, passionate and bewitching. Shaun Dooley is just as
good as reluctant hero Kieran, a troubled father figure attempting to make
amends for his failures as a family man. The relationship that blossoms between
the pair becomes the films anchor, and both actors make the most of some zingy
dialogue and melancholy moments.
Not everything works as well as it should however. Colin
O’Donnell’s gripping script gives Lawrence Gough the freedom to take his movie
in several directions, but I’m not convinced he chooses the right path at every
turn. A confused relationship dynamic takes the edge off what should’ve been an
emotional payoff, and daughter Jodie disappears from the movie after the
opening act. I would’ve loved to have seen her side of the story as well,
enhancing the climax of the movie and giving Linzey Cocker more screen time.
She is, after all, exceptional throughout as well.
Adding the military to the mix was a smart move though, and
their presence is actually more terrifying than anything else the screenplay conjures
up. Unfortunately, Lawrence chooses to focus on the least frightening aspects
of the movie, and it’s here that Salvage loses momentum. The effects aren’t
great, and the final confrontation suffers greatly because the destructive
force behind the bedlam lacks true conviction. We only ever get to see the
devastation it causes after the events unfold, and when the big reveal does
come, its hard to imagine that this is what the military has been trying to
keep under wraps for so much of the film, its really not scary at all.
That said, Lawrence does well to keep it hidden, and if his
only failure is the films final reveal, then he deserves credit for creating
the wealth of tension that comes before it. Without his effective turn behind
the camera, the ending wouldn’t feel quite so disappointing, so in essence, the
one true criticism of the film could actually be considered a compliment.
Despite a rushed conclusion, Salvage remains a smart, relevant, scary little
thriller. Stunning lead turns, current themes and fears, capable direction and
a healthy dose of tension combine to create a true undiscovered gem.
Lawrence Gough is a name to watch out for in future. Lets hope somebody gives him the time and money to build on his success here. Neve
McIntosh joins a long list of standout femme fatales, her performance alone is
reason enough to salvage Gough’s superb debut feature from the pit of video
store obscurity. Makes you proud to be British. AW
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