Let Us Prey (film)

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Let Us Prey
Film Poster
Directed byBrian O'Malley
Written by
  • Fiona Watson
  • David Cairns
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyPiers McGrail
Edited byTony Kearns
Music bySteve Lynch
Production
companies
Distributed byKaleidoscope Entertainment
Release dates
  • 17 April 2014 (2014-04-17) (BIFFF)
  • 12 June 2015 (2015-06-12)
Running time
92 minutes[1]
Countries
  • United Kingdom
  • Ireland
LanguageEnglish

Let Us Prey is a 2014 horror film directed by Brian O'Malley and written by Fiona Watson and David Cairns.

Plot[edit]

A mysterious man arrives in a small town in Scotland where PC Rachel Heggie awakens from a nightmare about being abused as a child before heading out on patrol. Whilst on patrol, Heggie witnesses Francis "Caesar" Sargison's car strike the mystery man. He disappears, and Heggie arrests Caesar. At the police station, she is greeted by Sgt Jim Macready, who charges Caesar with reckless driving. Heggie radios PCs Jennifer Mundie and Jack Warnock to find the victim before taking Caesar to the cells, where he joins his teacher, Mr. Ralph Beswick, arrested for beating his wife.

Mundie and Warnock, having found the man that Caesar hit, bring him to the station, mute, covered in scratches and carrying only a notebook with lists of names. Heggie phones Dr. Duncan Hume to examine him; however, upon examination Hume experiences a flashback and attempts to kill his patient for supposedly knowing what Hume has done. Hume is placed in a cell, and the unknown man is identified as having the fingerprints of an old man who died over 20 years ago. He makes several references to Old Testament justice before Macready also suffers a flashback and angrily has Heggie and Mundie place him in cell six (and for this reason the character is named "Six" in the end credits, although never referred to as such by any other characters during the film). Mundie has a flashback to beating a prisoner with Warnock.

Macready has Mundie and Warnock go to Hume's house to find his wife before Macready drives to his own home. Heggie researches the names in Six's notebook, discovering they are all deceased criminals. In the cells, Six, who displays supernatural powers, quizzes Beswick about the true reason why he beats his wife. Unsatisfied with Beswick's answers, Six induces him to attempt suicide. Caesar alerts Heggie, who allows Hume to examine Beswick, who dies after claiming to know who Six is. Elsewhere, Mundie and Warnock enter Hume's house and find he has murdered his family. Macready is revealed to be a serial killer who seduces and then murders young men, as shown by several missing posters in the police station. He hurriedly disposes of a dismembered body in his fridge along with the body of one of the men shown on the posters, whom he had beaten to death in a drunken rage.

Hume helps Heggie carry Beswick upstairs, but he attacks her when she learns about his family. After restraining him, she returns him to his cell. Six reveals he knows about Heggie's childhood abuse, and, when she leaves, he offers Caesar redemption if he confesses to a second hit and run accident from earlier in the night when he ran over a young girl and left her to die. Mundie and Warnock return and drag Hume to interrogation, ignoring Caesar's attempt to confess. As Hume confesses to Mundie about killing his family out of nihilistic boredom with his career and a desire to unlock the secret of immortality, Warnock talks to Six and has a flashback to staging the suicide of the man he and Mundie had beaten. Enraged, Warnock rushes to interrogation and brutally kills Hume in front of Heggie and Mundie. Heggie is threatened into remaining silent.

Caesar confesses to Heggie about hitting the girl, but Six says it is too late for redemption, as the girl had died two minutes earlier where Caesar left her next to the road. Heggie also has a flashback and remembers that Six had distracted her childhood abuser, allowing her time to escape. Six informs her Mundie and Warnock are planning to kill her. Heggie fights Mundie and Warnock, who nearly succeed in strangling her, until the sudden return of Macready, now insane, wrapped in barbed wire, wielding a shotgun and quoting verses from the Bible. He shoots and kills Warnock, then wounds both Heggie and Mundie as they barricade themselves in the cells. While Macready sets the building on fire, Six makes references to his true identity, of losing an argument with "an old friend" about human sin, and being an outcast like Heggie. He offers to help her, but only if she asks him to. She refuses.

While escaping, Mundie slips and cuts her throat on a broken window and is killed by Macready's pressing of her throat further onto the broken glass with his rifle butt, and then Macready further wounds Heggie before killing Caesar with his gun after scarring his face. Heggie throws Macready's fuel can at him, which he accidentally shoots. Mortally wounded in the explosion, he quotes a final bible verse. Heggie responds "Amen" and kills him by crushing his face with a battering ram. Heggie escapes the police station, and Six appears, unburnt, with his notebook, which he reveals has everybody's name inside. He crosses off every name except Heggie's and condemns the others to Hell for their various sins: Mundie and Warnock as “adulterers and betrayers who dare to weigh justice in their own hands” as the married Warnock had been having an affair with Mundie, Beswick as a hypocrite, Macready as a pervert, Hume as being “cowardly and vicious”, and Caesar for both hitting the girl with his car and being too weak to confess. Six reveals he is in love with Heggie and offers her a place at his side to seek vengeance on the guilty; she agrees, and they kiss.

Cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Several scenes were rewritten at McIntosh's behest. She saw her character as strong and did not want Heggie to be viewed as a victim or in a sexualised way. The filmmakers were also careful not to depict Heggie's background of abuse exploitatively.[2]

Release[edit]

Let Us Prey premiered at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival.[3] It was released on video-on-demand and DVD in the US on 26 May 2015.[4] In the UK, it was released to video-on-demand on 28 September and on DVD on 19 October 2015.[5]

Let Us Prey was released in Japan on 5 January 2016, with the title of popular anime Death Note, despite neither having anything to do with each other.[6]

Reception[edit]

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 83% of twelve surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 6.44/10.[7] Tara Brady of The Irish Times rated it 3/5 stars and wrote that "splatter-hounds will get their money's worth".[8] The Herald wrote the film starts off slowly and has weak dialogue, but praised Cunningham's acting and the occasionally cartoonish gore, which they said make it fun.[9] Harry Guerin of Raidió Teilifís Éireann rated it 4/5 stars and praised the acting of both McIntosh and Cunningham, who he said was perfectly cast.[10] Ken W. Hanley of Fangoria rated it 3/4 stars and wrote, "While the film doesn't quite contain the cinematic magic or gravitas to be an out-and-out genre classic, Let Us Prey is one of the more satisfying and utterly savage horror films in recent memory".[11] Andrew Marshall of Starburst rated it 10/10 stars and wrote, "Striking a perfect balance of suspense, violence, humour, story and action, Let Us Prey feels at once classic and modern".[12] Reviews from Dread Central, Bloody Disgusting, and Twitch Film complimented the film on its atmosphere, visuals, and initial mystery but criticized the film's second half as comparatively disappointing.[13][14][15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "LET US PREY (18)". British Board of Film Classification. 22 May 2015. Retrieved 23 May 2015.
  2. ^ Whittaker, Richard (26 May 2015). "DVDanger: Let Us Prey". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  3. ^ Breatnach, Siobhan (29 April 2014). "Top European award for Irish film Let Us Prey". The Irish Post. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  4. ^ Miska, Brad (21 April 2015). "'Let Us Prey', Starring 'The Woman's' Pollyanna McIntosh, Dated For Home Video". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  5. ^ Competitions (12 October 2015). "Win Let Us Prey on DVD". HeyUGuys. Archived from the original on 20 November 2015. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  6. ^ Baseel, Casey (20 December 2015). "Live-action, Western-made Death Note film opening in Japan, but it's not what anime fans think". Sora News 24. Socio Corporation. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
  7. ^ "Let Us Prey (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  8. ^ Brady, Tara (12 June 2015). "Let Us Prey review: Just when you imagine the people onscreen couldn't be more evil, they are". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  9. ^ "Movie Reviews: Jurassic World, Let Us Prey and Queen & Country". The Herald. Independent News & Media. 12 June 2015. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  10. ^ Guerrin, Harry (11 June 2015). "Let Us Prey". Raidió Teilifís Éireann. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  11. ^ Hanley, Ken W. (1 June 2015). ""LET US PREY" (Film Review)". Fangoria. Fangoria Entertainment. Archived from the original on 12 July 2017. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  12. ^ Marshall, Andrew (5 October 2015). "LET US PREY". Starburst. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  13. ^ Boiselle, Matt (22 May 2015). "Let Us Prey (Blu-ray / DVD)". Dread Central. Dread Central Media. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  14. ^ Conron, Pierce (22 September 2014). "Fantastic Fest 2014 Review: Strong Visuals Not Enough to Save LET US PREY". Twitch Film. Archived from the original on 14 June 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2015.
  15. ^ Cooper, Patrick (19 May 2015). "[SFF '15 Review] 'Let Us Prey' Is Visually Stunning; Loses Steam Towards End". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 19 November 2015.

External links[edit]