6.3
From the producers of Paranormal Activity, Insidious, and Sinister comes Dark Skies: a supernatural thriller that follows a young family living in the suburbs. As husband and wife Daniel and Lacey Barret witness an escalating series of disturbing events involving their family, their safe and peaceful home quickly unravels. When it becomes clear that the Barret family is being targeted by an unimaginably terrifying and deadly force, Daniel and Lacey take matters in their own hands to solve the mystery of what is after their family.
Keri Russell
Lacy Barrett
Josh Hamilton
Daniel
Dakota Goyo
Jesse
J.K. Simmons
Edwin Pollard
Trevor St. John
Alex Holcombe
Annie Thurman
Shelly
Myndy Crist
Karen
Josh Wingate
Gun Salesperson
Ron Ostrow
Richard
Alyvia Alyn Lind
Young Daughter
Kadan Rockett
Sam Barrett
L.J. Benet
Kevin Ratner
Rich Hutchman
Mike Jessop
Jake Brennan
Bobby Jessop (as Jake Washburn)
Marion Kerr
Young Mother
Josh Stamberg
Police Officer
Tiffany Jeneen
Protection One Operator
Brian Stepanek
Security System Technician
Judith Moreland
Janice Rhodes
Adam Schneider
Young Husband
Jessica Borden
Young Wife
Kenneth Meseroll
Pete
Andy Umberger
Doctor Jonathan Kooper
Michael Patrick McGill
Ratner's Father
Alexandra Anthony
Naughty Cheerleader (as Alexandra Fulton)
Scott Anthony
Naughty Teacher
Tom Costello
Young Father
Jaeden Bettencourt
(photo double: Kadan Rockett)
Director, Writer
Scott Stewart
June 21, 2014
6
Enter Sandman.
Dark Skies is written and directed by Scott Stewart. It stars Keri Russell, Josh Hamilton, Dakota Goyo, Kaden Rockett and J.K. Simmons. Music is by Joseph Bishara and cinematography by David Boyd.
Two possibilities exist... Either we are alone in the universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying. - Arthur C. Clarke
Movies involving alien visitations are notoriously tricky things to execute, there's a very thin line between cerebral willingness and crummy construction. Dark Skies unsurprisingly is another in a long line of sci-fi/horror movies that divides the respective genre followers.
Plot finds the Barrett family home suddenly succumbing to mysterious phenomena, suicidal birds, time lapses, poltergeist activity, nightmares and body markings et al...
It's a film that most definitely didn't deliver the spook fest that the (mixed) marketing campaign suggested, while it unfortunately comes off as a collage of well known genre titles of recent pasts. Add to this some less than great acting from the adult leads, the complete waste of J.K. Simmons in a very promising role, and unoriginality of concepts, then it's not hard to see why it has been the victim of venom in some quarters.
However, Scott Stewart is not guilty of taking the easy route to genre cinema as per production. There's no over reliance on CGI, or for big booms and crashes to startle in the name of cheap thrills, in fact the scare scenes are well placed and well timed. He also proves to be a very good purveyor of slow burn atmospherics, itself something that can alienate the more boisterous and excitable genre fans.
The vision of a suburban American family under siege is well played out, the little trials and tribulations of a working class family not swamping the big objective, so when things gather apace and the child actors come to the fore, time invested by the patient is rewarded.
If at times it doesn't have the courage of its convictions, Dark Skies at the very least doesn't resort to alien abduction clichés to seal its deal. There's a number of "issues" with it, especially if you are either into clinical alien abduction science (history) or edge of your seats underwear shocks, but this is above average and worth a viewing for those interested in such dalliances. 6/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$3,500,000.00
Revenue:
$25,174,316.00