Rogue – Im falschen Revier (2007)

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Rogue – Im falschen Revier: Directed by Greg McLean. With Radha Mitchell, Michael Vartan, Sam Worthington, Caroline Brazier. An American journalist on assignment in the Australian outback encounters a man-eating crocodile while trapped on a rapidly flooding mud island.

“Rogue is co-produced, written and directed by Greg Mclean (Wolf Creek). It stars Michael Vartan, Radha Mitchell, Sam Worthington u0026amp; John Jarratt. The film is inspired by the true story of u0026quot;Sweetheartu0026quot;, a giant Australian crocodile that terrorised boats in a 5 year period between 1974 u0026amp; 1979. Plot sees travel journalist Pete McKell (Vartan) in the Northern Territory of Australia finishing off his latest feature. With time to kill he joins a river boat cruise led by spunky local lass Kate Ryan (Mitchell). So along with assorted other tourists, they set off up river. Where after a tricky encounter with a couple of local nuisances, one of the tourists spies a distress flare further up stream, then another, and another. As captain of the boat, Kate is duty bound to respond to aid anyone who may be in distress on the waters. However, this means straying into u0026quot;sacred watersu0026quot; and before they know it, they are in the middle of the hunting ground of a gigantic crocodile. Who promptly attacks the boat and forces the group onto the nearest mini island, an island that is in tidal waters….and the tide is coming in………u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eUpon viewing Rouge it would seem that it may be one of the most unfortunate horror releases of the last ten years. It barely got a theatrical release outside of its own country (practically one week in selected cinemas in America u0026amp; Europe), and it came out at a time when killer–croc movies were appearing almost every other month; Primeval, Black Water and Lake Placid 2 (good grief) all u0026quot;surfacedu0026quot; (hrr hrr hrr) during 2007 to take a u0026quot;chompu0026quot; (ok Iu0026#39;ll stop now) at the movie watching public. This following on from the sub-genre of aquatic reptile horror movies already being well served by Steve Mineru0026#39;s Lake Placid (1999) u0026amp; Lewis Teagueu0026#39;s Alligator (1980), both of which have huge fan bases. Itu0026#39;s all relevant because Rogue happens to be the best of the bunch, a snappy (sorry, couldnu0026#39;t resist), scary, fun and slickly-produced Aussie movie. Itu0026#39;s sickening that reams of sub-standard horror remakes get wide distribution whilst something like this, that deserves the chance at least, canu0026#39;t. The Weinstein Bothers should be ashamed of themselves for the treatment of Mcleanu0026#39;s film.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eStraight away we should make clear that, as its certification suggests, Rouge is not particularly bloody. Those in need of sequence after sequence of a crocodile tearing humans limb from limb need not seek this film out. While it is in no way able to live with Lake Placid in terms of being u0026quot;intentionallyu0026quot; humorous, thus comedy seekers should approach with caution. What Rogue offers is a movie thatu0026#39;s tightly structured and paced to precision, packed with suspense and affording its characters some time to actually impact on the story. The first half hour is technically sublime, as we get to know the various folk on board the boat, we are treated to gorgeous cinematography from Will Gibson (location the estuaries of the Northern Territory), accompanied by one of the most pleasingly orchestral scores ever laid down for a creature feature, courtesy of François Tetaz (the nods to Jaws are just fine). All of this of course serves to offer up the calm before the inevitable storm; from where Mclean then follows the marker set by Jaws by not giving us sight of the croc. Itu0026#39;s the ultimate tease until the attacks start, but even then its mostly suggestion, the tension mounts as we couple it with our own imagination.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWhat unfolds from here is a series of set pieces as our stranded group try to avoid becoming crocodile lunch. Here normally a film of this ilk shows dumb people doing dumb things, but Mclean shows respect to the genre and its fans by having some of these folk do silly, yet understandable, things, thus the scares are elicited by way of believable reactions. And of course the situation brings out the best and worst from most of them; peril has a funny way of doing that to a human being. Also of note here is that Mclean doesnu0026#39;t make the croc a monster, this is merely a hungry animal protecting its territory. A quick piece of dialogue earlier in the story had pointed to hunters possibly being the ones who fired the distress flares, as croc goes about his snarly way, it doesnu0026#39;t hurt to remember this moment. The cast all give credible performances, notably the handsome hero in waiting Vartan, Mitchell (whose becoming the screen queen darling these days) u0026amp; Jarratt, who shows us a different string to his acting bow than the one he played as loony Mick Taylor in Wolf Creek.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe movie has its flaws, but they are few. The croc on appearance will irk some people, tis true that Mclean could have done better there. While one WTF turn of events loses its impact as the director isnu0026#39;t as bold to follow thru like he did in Wolf Creek. But they are forgivable. For as we find ourselves holding our breaths during the creepy and practically silent finale, that culminates in a fine B movie bit of outrageousness, we realise that above all else itu0026#39;s been the suspense and ominous foreboding that made this one damn effective thriller. Mclean appears to be holding a grudge against his native country, his two films thus far hardly enticing the tourists to explore the gorgeous lands of Australia. What ever his means or motivation, long may it continue if he keeps producing films like this. Lets hope that his next project is not as ignored as this one was. Because for sure there is a very good director here and it would be tragic should a talent be burned by how his movie was handled and decided to take a step back from directing.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eEvocative beauty blends with B movie thrills for a devilishly great time. 8/10”

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