Apocalypse Pompeii
Apocalypse Pompeii is a 2014 American disaster film produced by The Asylum and directed by Ben Demaree. The film stars Adrian Paul, Jhey Castles, John Rhys-Davies, Dylan Vox, Dan Cade. It was filmed in Sofia, Bulgaria, and Pompeii, Italy.
Apocalypse Pompeii | |
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DVD cover | |
Directed by | Ben Demaree |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by | Jacob Cooney & Bill Hanstock |
Story by | Steve Bevilacqua |
Starring |
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Music by | Joseph Metcalfe |
Cinematography | Ben Demaree |
Edited by | Ana Florit |
Production company | |
Distributed by | The Asylum |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The film was released direct-to-DVD on 8 February 2014. In the tradition of The Asylum's catalog, Apocalypse Pompeii is a mockbuster of the Paul W. S. Anderson film Pompeii.[1][2]
Premise
When a Former Special Ops commando visits Pompeii, Italy, his wife and daughter are trapped as Mount Vesuvius erupts with massive force. While his family fights to survive the deadly onslaught of heat and lava, he enlists his former teammates in a daring operation beneath the ruins of Pompeii.
Cast
- Adrian Paul as Jeff Pierce
- Jhey Castles as Lynne Pierce
- Georgina Beedle as Mykaela Pierce
- John Rhys-Davies as Col. Carlo Dillard
- Dylan Vox as Kal
- Dan Cade as Cade
- Constatine Trendafilda as Gianni
- Assen Vukushev as Naveen
- Alexandra Petrova-Emisti as Rashida
- Yordam Yositov as Rosso
- Harry Anichkin as Italian Colonel
- Vrunda Patel as Christina
- Jonas Talkington as Paul
- Ralitsa Paskaleva as Alita
- J.R. Esposito as Smith
- Michael Straub as Herricane
- Ivan Panayotov as Soldier
- Malin Marinov as Police Officer
- Owen Davis as Pilot
- Plamen Petkov as Man 1
- Deyan Tsuyathov as Man 2
- Boris Vashev as Man 3
- Lolita Nikolova as Woman
- Iveta-Luis Contreras as Mother
- Velislav Pavlov as Little Girl's Father
- Elayah Roth as Little Girl
- Ivo Tonchev as Businessman
Production
This film marks the directing debut for Ben Demaree. Previously he had been a cinematographer on numerous films, including the Sharknado franchise. Shooting took place for 12 days in Sofia, Bulgaria during the month of Sept., and then a few splinter unit days at the real Pompeii in Italy.
Most of the crew were local hires, with only a handful of people flown in from the US, including the sound mixer and steadicam operator. The cast was a mix of US, UK, and local Bulgarians. There were financial advantages to filming in Bulgaria, allowing the film to do bigger stunts including full body burns, setting cars on fire, and using cork bombs for explosions from 'flying volcanic rock'.[3]
Reception
Reviewer Frank Veenstra gave the film 4 out of 10 stars saying "The writing isn't all that great and to be honest, it's a very ridiculous movie but at the same time, it's also a pretty creative one."[4]
Martin Hafer of Influx gave the film one out of five stars, citing that "the plot is stupid and the characters are shallow—often coming off as caricatures."[2]
References
- Tarkas, Tars. "Apocalypse Pompei - Asylum decides to destroy Pompeii their way!". TarsTarkas.net. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
- Hafer, Martin (2014-02-18). "Apocalypse Pompeii". Influx. Archived from the original on 2014-05-13. Retrieved 2014-05-13.
- "Interview with Ben Demaree, director of Apocalypse Pompeii". Tars Tarkas.NET.
- "Apocalypse Pompeii (2014) Directed by Ben Demaree".
External links
- Official site at The Asylum
- Apocalypse Pompeii on IMDb
- Apocalypse Pompeii at Rotten Tomatoes