The name may scream down-market drivel, but Evilution stands as a credible low-budget, mixed-genre DVD entry, a horror-infused tale of mutant military engineering that metes out appropriate levels of gore and thrill while also rooting its story in actual characters.
The plot? On the battlefields of Iraq, a microscopic alien life form has been discovered that has the ability to both possess the living and resurrect the dead. The drawback? Rampaging, zombie-type rage. With visions of practical battlefield application dancing in their minds, however, the military works to genetically alter the creature. But the alien fights back, turning soldier against soldier. Back Stateside, scientist Darren Hall (Eric Peter-Kaiser) goes AWOL with the last pure specimen of the alien, holing up in an old hospital turned rundown apartment complex to continue his off-the-book experiments and try to learn the secrets of life.
There, Darren crosses paths with a group of thinly sketched Latino gang-bangers, led by Curtis, aka Random (Noel Gugliemi, showing rich evidence of his Masters Degree in Scowling), but also potential love interest Maddie Gilbert (Sandra Ramirez), who’s thankfully much easier on the eyes. The military is slowly closing in on Darren. But when Curtis gets shot and Darren treats his wound, it sets in motion a chain of events in which infected tenants attack their unsuspecting peers, imperiling Darren and a small group of survivors.
Evilution is the directorial debut of Chris Conlee, an industry veteran with a hearty list of editing credits. His steady sense of story order generally serves this narrative well, whether in the brisk effectiveness of the movie’s square-jawed military sequences, or in intercutting an otherwise somewhat out-of-place love scene with a desperate junkie unknowingly shooting up with Darren’s alien-infected virus (sex and death, don’tcha know). In the military-science-run-amok department, there’s a bit of thematic
overlap with fellow (albeit higher-profile) straight-to-video flick The Devil’s Tomb, which is ironic considering that Conlee served as editor on that picture. This isn’t reinventing the wheel, by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s rendered with more attention to detail than many like-minded flicks.
A fairly inauspicious opening (your stock Biblical quote, a sequence ending with an even more familiar bloody handprint smear across a glass windowpane) thankfully soon gives way to a bit more nuance and shading. It’s obvious that the available space which serves as much of the film’s setting (an abandoned hospital) is tweaked and dressed at times to fairly awkward degrees. But in addition to fairly well modulated lead performances, what most helps elevate and separate Evilution from much of its genre brethren is its snatches of superlative cinematography. While true that the film is shot in generic close-up to a dispiriting degree, cinematographer Mathew Rudenberg’s work is certainly a nice upgrade over typical horror-thriller fare, with a smartly chosen color palette and nice capture of streaming sunlight.
Housed in a regular plastic Amaray case, Evilution comes to DVD presented in anamorphic widescreen, split into 16 chapters, with a 5.1 surround sound audio mix. A two-minute theatrical trailer is included, but the main bonus features consist of a feature-length audio commentary track with Conlee, Peter-Kaiser and Ramirez, as well as a surprisingly comprehensive 27-minute making-of featurette, in which Conlee talks of his professional relationship with writer-producer Brian Patrick O’Toole, and how he came to be drafted into the movie. Interview snippets with a wide variety of cast and crew also provide a nice behind-the-scenes snapshot of budget filmmaking. To purchase the DVD via Amazon, click here. C+ (Movie) B (Disc)
Thanks for the review. We really enjoyed making the movie, so it’s nice to see people being appreciative of it. We knew we weren’t reinventing the wheel, we just wanted to make a snappy and entertaining movie for the fans.
I enjoyed this movie and Basement Jack. I noticed one particular character in both movies, And that was the manager of the apartment building.He’s a very odd person and I think Brian O’Toole should write a movie about this person, His back story must really incredible because of his “Collection”. He’s the type of person you wouldn’t want to run in at anytime. I look forward in seeing a movie made about the manager. This actor is really creepy. Two thumbs up!!!