The Sand

The Sand

After an all-night graduation beach party, a group of hung-over students wake up under blazing sun to find their numbers somewhat depleted. An enormous alien creature has burrowed down deep and anyone foolish enough to make contact with the sand finds themselves at the mercy of a sea of flesh-eating tentacles.

Can you say Blood Beach?

OK so maybe thatโ€™s not fair. After all Jeffrey Bloomโ€™s 1980 fear-flick, despite having a similar premise โ€“ something eating people on the beach, dragging them under the sand โ€“ is worldโ€™s apart from the gory body-horror of Isaac Gabaeffโ€™s film. Whereas that film often played for oddball humour both intentionally and unintentionally, The Sand plays things very straight. And is all the better for it. Plus Gabaeffโ€™s movie has some INCREDIBLE gore effects, even if a lot of them are rendered in CGI. Hell, you have to love any film where a characters face is ripped off a mere 10 minutes into the story! Power Rangers fans will be in for a shock to see Hector David Jr., aka Samuraiโ€™s Green Ranger, suffer that fateโ€ฆ

Speaking of CGI, there are some issues with the effects, especially during a couple of the bigger, and gorier, death scenes; but itโ€™s testament to The Sandโ€˜s production that the low-budget nature of the effects donโ€™t detract too much from the overall experience and, thankfully, doesnโ€™t stop the filmmakers from actually โ€“ come the big finale โ€“ showing just what is under the sand, giant tentacles and all!

Where The Sand reallydoes shine is in its plotting. Gabaeff and his writers, Alex Greenfield and Ben Powell, are not afraid to play with genre conventions โ€“ characters you expect will survive to the end of the movie donโ€™t and itโ€™s the girls, so often the eye-candy standing alongside the brave hero, that actually take charge and try to facilitate the groups escape off the sand. Even if it doesnโ€™t all go to plan. At all.

Thankfully the cast do a fantastic job of emoting sheer terror when faced with nothing more than a pile of sand, especially Brooke Butler and Meagan Holder โ€“ whose characters not only have to overcome the animosity between them but also try and rescue the one guy that has come between themโ€ฆ And kudos also to Cleo Berry who manages to really make the audience empathise with his characters plight, so much so its a shame to see him perish. Plus being stuck in a barrel for most the movie couldnโ€™t have been easy! Berry also gets The Sandโ€˜s most epic death scenes and deservingly so, as Berry seemingly relishes the opportunity to let loose.

If the final coda is anything to go by, we havenโ€™t seen the last of the creature under the sand and Iโ€™d happily pay to see Gabeaff and co. bring us another round of tentacle-based death and destruction, especially if (as is alluded to in The Sandโ€˜s final shot) itโ€™s on a much grander scale.

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…1/2
Phil Wheat

Sci-fi, Horror | USA, 2015 | 15|Film4 Frightfest 2015 | Dir.Isaac Gabaeff | Mitchel Musso, Dean Geyer, Nikki Leigh, Brooke Butler, Meagan Holder, Jamie Kennedy, Hector David Jr., Cynthia Murell, Cleo Berry, Etalvia Cashin, Adam Powell


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Paul

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The founder of The People's Movies, started the site 20th November 2008.The site has excelled past all expectations with many only giving the site months and it's still going strong. A lover of French Thrillers, Post Apocalyptic films, Asian cinema. 2009 started Cinehouse to start his 'cinema education' learning their is life outside mainstream cinema. Outside of film, love to travel with Sorrento, Guangzhou and Manchester all favourite destinations.Musically loves David Bowie, Fishbone, Radiohead.

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