The Corridor
Someone has been ingesting quite a bit of Richard Kelly and Stephen King, namely, the latter's "The Tommyknockers" and "Dreamcatcher."
The Corridor, a thriller blending sci-fi and horror elements, is undoubtedly a reflection of some of the abstract qualities peppered throughout Kelly's Donnie Darko or The Box. Also, I think it owes a great debt to the set-up and ideas of the aforementioned King novels. But that doesn't necessarily mean The Corridor is a flat-out triumph. Those Kelly/King works cited above are heavily - sometimes laughably - flawed, and The Corridor is rough around the edges as well, however, director Evan Kelly and writer Josh McDonald deserve kudos for their painstakingly layered, absorbing film which will have you guessing at every turn and isn't afraid to go for the throat.
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Charging right out of the gate, The Corridor opens on a scene of violence involving a man, Tyler, holed up in a closet. His dead mother is face-down in the hallway just outside the closet door. When three of his friends make this grim, unusual discovery, Tyler lashes out at them, stabbing one pal in the hand until the other two take him down. Flash forward a few years later and the friends are a bit older, maybe a little bit wiser. Four of Tyler's friends are now holding a reunion at his mother's secluded cabin retreat to celebrate Tyler's release from the hospital. There's the usual awkwardness and apprehension (since Tyler got a bit "stabby"), but nothing quite matches the discovery they make in the woods: A rippling force field of sorts. Something kinetic and ever-expanding. For this group, it's also energizing. But something this fascinating and peculiar can't be all that good, right? Right. This “find†begins to have an effect on the gents and things get ugly.
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