There's a fantasy I like to have about The Chernobyl Diaries.
Once it was just a nice little script. Some aspiring, slightly dopey screenwriter that had watched Stalker while drunk and realized, in perhaps the most influential moment of his life, "hey, nobody has done a slasher movie INSIDE Chernobyl!" He sets to work, watching a Discovery Channel documentary about the disaster, googling "Geiger Counter Ghostbusters Sigourney Weaver nude," and trying to come up with an interesting hook for the killer before throwing his hands up in the air and jotting down "ATOMIC MUTANT." Eventually, the script it finished. It's not really good, but there's some decent scare scenes, a boobie or two, and enough gore for those indie horror fans. The script is shipped around, but there's not alot of interest, and eventually the screenwriter is exhausted of the whole process, vowing not to bother another bored talent scout with his dumb script ever again.
Six months later, there's a call. Three hours later, our hero is in a comfortable office, talking to some so and so executive from Warner Brothers. He loves the script, and thinks there's a good chance that it could become a feature move. The executive leans forward and smiles, his teeth filed to pointed ends. "There's just a few changes we'd like to make," he says as his hand goes around his chair, grabbing an ax with the words "PG-13" carved into the handle.
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Of course, this is almost certainly not even close to the truth. I don't want to admit it, but there's probably a ready corps of shitty screenwriters that have no problems with pumping out PG-13 horror for the film off-season. The screenwriter didn't see Stalker, but instead thought that abandoned amusement park scene from Call of Duty 4 was so cool. And Chernobyl Diaries isn't the worst film in that gang, but it really exemplifies everything that makes me hate current commercial horror films.
The first thing to know about The Chernobyl Diaries is that you absolutely should not watch it for a "so bad it's good" feeling. This is because, for a movie that can't even muster a 90-minute running time, it takes just about an hour until something actually happens. Until then, you're forced to watch a bunch of cis-white scum college fucks bumbling around Ukraine at large, then Chernobyl under the pretense of an EXTREME TOUR. Despite the insinuation in the title that this might be some awful found footage thing, the film can't even muster that aside from some WACKY HIJINKS in the opening credits and one spooky scene found on a blooooody handheld caaaaaaaaaaameraaaaa which, even by the basement standards of the found footage trashboat, is so disorganized and clunky it's a good thing we just got standard cinematography for this shitheap.
None of the characters are remotely likeable, of course. There's the sensible brother and the wild brother, the boring blonde engaged to the sensible brother, the brunette that the wild brother wants to bang. Eventually this CORE GROUP is met by the boring Russian tour guide who naturally dies first, and some European mishmash couple or something who fucking cares.
Even when they get to Chernobyl for their big tour, nothing happens for awhile. They walk through some abandoned house and see the spooky amusement park, then someone sees something but it's nothing and JESUS HAS IT BEEN 55 MINUTES ALREADY THIS MOVIE JUST ZOOMING BY. The baddies eventually attack, but since this is a PG-13 movie and nobody knows how to make scenes creepy anymore, it's just jump cuts and blood stains on the floor. There's a scene where one of the ladies is abducted by the marauding mutant men, and not found until about 15 minutes later, where she's clearly in emotional shock but still wearing all her clothes. It takes a very special kind of movie which manages to both be extremely gross and yet deny the viewer his prurient pound of flesh. Good job, Chernobyl Diaries!
There's just one more thing I want to say about Chernobyl Diaries before I can never think about this shitty film again, a thing that really encapsulates everything that needs to be said about it.
When the Bore Crew rolls into Chernobyl, they stop at some river or lake for a breather. There's a failed jump scare, then someone throws a piece of jerky into the water for some reason. They leave, but the camera stays on the beef jerky, before being PULLED UNDER THE WATER. Sad to say, this is probably the closest thing this movie comes to actually being...anything really. So what's the payoff for this set up, you ask?
Later on after the monster dudes have revealed themselves, the survivors are running away from about three small dogs (don't fucking ask), and have to cross a 20 foot river via a rotting footbridge. The first few people make it across, but then a rung in the bridge breaks! Some one falls off into knee-deep water! But no, the terror isn't over, because some underpaid intern is in the water making splashing noises while the actor screams in terror over something we can't see! Then he wades across in five seconds, only to reveal that his leg was slightly scratched.
The Chernobyl Diaries.
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