Directed By: Michael J. Bassett
Starring: Sean Pertwee, Alex Reid, Toby Kebbell
Tag line: "On this treacherous land, Justice and Power will battle for Supremacy"
Trivia: In Portugal, this film was released as Wild Island
A 2006 horror film produced in the UK, Wilderness tells the brutal story of a group of delinquents who are being hunted by an unknown killer. It all begins when Dave (John Travers), one of several young inmates in a juvenile detention center, commits suicide. Determining that Dave’s death was the direct result of the physical and mental abuse heaped upon him by fellow inmates Steve (Stephen Wight) and Lewis (Luke Neal), the warden instructs their guard, Jed (Sean Pertwee), to take the entire group, which also includes Blue (Adam Deacon), Lindsay (Ben McKay), Jethro (Richie Campbell) and new arrival Callum (Toby Kebbell), to a remote island to teach them a little something about teamwork. Shortly after settling in, Jed and the others discover that another group of juvenile offenders, consisting entirely of girls, has set up camp nearby. Jed tries to convince the ladies to leave, but their guardian, Louise (Alex Reid), refuses to go. Unfortunately for them all, someone else is on the island as well, a killer with a crossbow and a pack of vicious dogs that obey his every command. With no idea who this person is or why he’s after them, the two groups band together and start looking for a boat that’ll carry them to safety, all the while realizing that the killer is most likely watching their every move.
At the outset, Wilderness feels like a teen drama with a strong anti-bullying message (in one particularly disturbing scene, Steve and Lewis corner both Dave and Lindsay in a closet and urinate on them). Even the initial sequences on the island are deceptively quiet, save the odd argument between the troubled teens. But the moment all hell breaks loose, it does so in a big, big way. Soon after discovering the severed arm of one unfortunate character who wandered off by himself, another is struck in the abdomen by an arrow, fired from an unknown location. A few seconds later, another arrow hits him… then another…. until finally the poor victim is pinned to a tree. It’s at this point the dogs descend on him, tearing him apart (his hand is chewed off, and a huge chunk of flesh is ripped from his face, all shown in graphic detail). And rest assured this character won’t be the last to meet a grisly end.
If the movie has one weakness, it’s the ending (things begin to fall apart the moment the killer speaks, and not even an unexpected twist can save it). But for most of its running time, Wilderness is a tensely paced, well-acted tale of survival that’s sure to appeal to those who like their horror films bloody.