Mine Games

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Mine Games
File:Mine Games poster.jpg
Directed by Richard Gray
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Mike Gillespie
  • Richard Gray
  • Christopher Lemole
Screenplay by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Michele Davis-Gray
  • Richard Gray
  • Ross McQueen
Story by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Robert Cross
  • Richard Gray
  • Ross McQueen
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Alies Sluiter
Cinematography Greg De Marigny
Edited by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Christopher Kroll
  • Heath Ryan
Production
company
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Vitamin A Films
  • Oak Street Films
Release dates
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • August 16, 2012 (2012-08-16) (MIFF)[1]
Running time
93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $700,000[2]

Mine Games is a 2012 time loop thriller film directed by Richard Gray.[3] The film stars Briana Evigan, Julianna Guill, and Joseph Cross.[4]

Plot

A van arrives at a gas station, where a nearby newspaper announces an "unidentified girl found dead in forest". The van belongs to a group of seven friends – Michael, Lyla, TJ, Claire, Lex, Rose, and Guy – who are traveling to a mutual friend's cabin in the woods for a vacation. Michael, who is driving, gets lost in the dark and swerves to avoid a waving figure in the road. The van crashes, which forces them to travel by foot. They arrive at a well-furnished cabin where Rose finds a written note telling "TJ, Lex, Claire" to wait there for them, so they assume that this is the house.

The group enjoys themselves in the comfortable cabin, with the exception of Michael, who sleeps early and has nightmares. The next morning, TJ discovers an abandoned mine nearby and takes the group inside to explore. TJ and Guy, as a joke, briefly lock Michael inside an enclosed cell, which causes him to panic. Rose, who is a psychic, is uneasy about the mine and at one point feels someone grab her leg, though it cannot be one of her friends.

Michael and his girlfriend Lyla return to the van to collect Michael's anti-psychotic medication and confirm that the van is unusable. They find blood on the van's fender and assume that they hit an animal the previous night. Upon returning to the house, the group collectively agrees to stay one more day to wait for the owners of the house. Over the day, Rose has fits and visions of her friends in various stages of death and injury.

While exploring the mines again, TJ and Lex discover three dead bodies that appear identical to theirs and Guy's. They inform the others, and the group reluctantly agrees that something supernatural is occurring. TJ and Lex return to the mine in search of answers and find a traumatized Claire locked inside a cell; she claims that it is Michael's doing. TJ and Lex refuse to save her, knowing that "their" Claire is still in the house, a decision that Claire later supports. Despite Lyla's protests, the others debate whether Michael needs to be locked up overnight for their protection. Unnerved by his passive acceptance of his fate, they put him inside one of the mine's cells.

Michael escapes from the cell, which leads to a chase inside the mines, during which Michael causes TJ and Lex's deaths and locks Claire up inside a cell, where she meets the alternate version of herself. Inside the house, Rose succumbs to poisoning and dies. Guy and Lyla agree to flee, leaving behind in the house a written note for "TJ, Lex, Claire" to wait there for them. Upon reaching the main road, Guy tries to wave down an oncoming van, causing it to swerve and hit Lyla. Guy recognizes the occupants of the van as "them" from the night before and realizes that they are inside a causality loop. He promises the seriously injured Lyla that he will break the cycle.

Guy rushes back to the house to warn the others but is stopped by Michael, who kills him. Michael continues the cycle by warning his past self that his friends will to try to kill him, and that when they lock him inside a cell for the second time, he has to defend himself. Michael gives his past self the key to the cell and forces his past self to burn his anti-psychotic medication.

The cycle restarts as the group's van arrives at the gas station at the beginning of the film. However this time Lyla from the previous cycle is still alive, and she hobbles towards her counterpart in the hopes of warning her and breaking the cycle.

Cast

Production

The original story was written by Ross McQueen and was set in Australia. Director Richard Gray, who was living in Australia at the time, worked with McQueen to adapt it to a setting in the US. Gray said that he was more influenced by Lord of the Flies than slasher films.[5] In July 2011, Cross and Peck joined the cast, and the film was reported to begin shooting.[4] The film was shot at Ape Cave in Gifford Pinchot National Forest[6] and locations outside of Seattle, Washington. It went into post production in Los Angeles, California for an anticipated 2012 release.[7][8] The film's crew consisted of a mixture of Australians and Americans, and the project was shot using the Red Epic camera.[7]

Release

The film premiered in August 2012 at the Melbourne International Film Festival.[1] Although originally set to be released in May 2014 in the US, it was renamed to The Evil Within, renamed back to Mine Games, and delayed until September 2014.[9] The delay was in part due to re-shooting the ending.[2]

Reception

Kwenton Bellette of Twitch Film wrote, "With such a great time travel horror thriller narrative that was advertised, Mine Games sadly comes off as nothing more than a poorly rehashed version of the masterful film Time Crimes or even Australian produced Triangle before it."[1] Patrick Cooper of Bloody Disgusting rated it 1.5/5 stars and wrote, "Time loops have been done better before (masterful even, in the case of Time Crimes). Mine Games wastes the perpetually interesting concept and delivers flat thrills and flaccid characters."[10] Debi Moore of Dread Central rated it 3/5 stars and wrote that the film starts off predictable but presents "a mind-bending series of twists and turns" that make it recommended.[11]

See also

References

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External links