Die Alone, 2024.
Written and directed by Lowell Dean.
Starring Carrie-Anne Moss, Douglas Smith, and Frank Grillo.
SYNOPSIS:
Lost in a world reclaimed by nature and overrun by mysterious creatures, a young man with amnesia teams up with an eccentric survivalist to find his missing girlfriend.
Lowell Dean’s biological horror Die Alone takes the well-worn tropes of the zombie apocalypse genre and injects them with just enough originality to stand out. What starts as a familiar post-pandemic survival story, with echoes of The Last of Us and Memento, soon twists into something more introspective.
Douglas Smith plays Ethan, a man suffering from a debilitating case of amnesia, waking each day with no memory of the one before. He is caught in a world ravaged by a plant-based virus that turns humans into grotesque, moss-covered husks.
Ethan’s only connection to the past is the memories of his missing girlfriend Emma (Kimberley-Sue Murray), whom he believes is still alive somewhere beyond the barren Saskatchewan plains. His survival depends on the help of Mae (Carrie-Anne Moss), a hardened loner with secrets of her own.
Moss, who knows a thing or two about unreliable memories (having starred in Memento), plays Mae with a controlled steeliness. Her role as protector, caretaker, and perhaps something more, adds an emotional weight that grounds the film’s more outlandish elements. At first, she seems like the archetypal apocalypse survivor, resourceful but isolated. But as Ethan’s recollection flickers back in fragments, it becomes clear that the relationship between these two is far more complicated.
Dean’s script cleverly plays with perspective. By tethering the story to Ethan’s fractured memories, the audience is forced to piece things together alongside him. It’s an effective device that gives Die Alone a psychological depth often missing from more formulaic zombie movie releases. The film’s use of flashbacks, rather than feeling like exposition dumps, are woven into the plot – slowly revealing not just the mechanics of Ethan’s condition, but the emotional stakes driving him forward.
Visually, Die Alone is impressive. Shot on location in the vast, desolate landscapes of Canada, the cinematography does well to convey a haunting emptiness. Dean’s decision to favour practical effects over CGI results in some genuinely unsettling plant-infected zombies, with fungal growths and grotesquely twisted forms. This brings a refreshingly organic edge to the film – think ‘the infected’ in The Last of Us, but with more bark.
The film suffers slightly when the pace drops in the middle, with certain sections feeling more like a slow-burning character study than a horror thriller. The tension also deflates when the threat of the infected takes a back seat to Ethan and Mae’s evolving dynamic. But when the film does lean into its horror elements, it delivers, particularly in the climactic third act.
The final twist is a gut-punch, elevating Die Alone beyond mere survival horror and into something deeper. Dean takes risks with his storytelling, and for the most part, they pay off. This is a film that knows its genre but refuses to be boxed in by it.
Not quite a game-changer, but certainly a refreshing detour in a well-trodden landscape, Die Alone is a zombie thriller with a heart – albeit a heart overgrown with creeping vines. Well worth a watch.
Flickering Myth Rating – Film: ★ ★ ★ / Movie: ★ ★ ★
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