The Well (2024) Review- A Familiar Apocalypse That Plays It Too Safe HORROR MOVIE REVIEW
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The Well (2024) Review: A Familiar Apocalypse That Plays It Too Safe

Hubert Davis’s post-apocalyptic thriller has a compelling premise and solid performances, but struggles to carve out its own identity in a crowded genre.

Survival instincts, scarce water, and a world you’ve seen before.

Water is the oldest weapon. Strip a society of it, and everything collapses, quickly and brutally. That premise sits at the core of The Well, a 2024 post-apocalyptic survival film directed by Hubert Davis. In a genre already crowded with dystopian thrillers, the film arrives with a genuinely resonant concept: almost all of the world’s water has been contaminated by a deadly virus. Deep in the woods, a family guards the most valuable thing left on earth, a working well with clean, unlimited water.

When that well’s filter fails, young Sarah, played with quiet determination by Shailyn Pierre-Dixon, ventures out into the collapsed world to find a replacement part. What she finds instead is a cult, a charismatic and unsettling leader named Gabriel (Sheila McCarthy), and a community of survivors held together by the promise of salvation.

The Well

A Horror Movie Review by Adam Barney

The Heart and Soul of Horror Review Websites. The Well (2024) Review: A Familiar Apocalypse That Plays It Too Safe
For a second I though she was going to offer us some tea
The Heart and Soul of Horror Review Websites. The Well (2024) Review: A Familiar Apocalypse That Plays It Too Safe

Scarcity of resources always brings out the worst in humanity. With everything that is going on in the world right now, the conflict at the heart of The Well feels more plausible than ever.

In Hubert Davis’s film, society has collapsed and almost all of the world’s water has been contaminated with a deadly virus. Deep in the woods, Sarah (Shailyn Pierre-Dixon) and her parents guard a homestead that has the most valuable resource – a well with unlimited water that is safe to consume. When the filter for the well goes bad, Sarah must help her family by venturing out into the world to try and find a replacement part.

Sarah’s journey leads her to a cult led by the enigmatic Gabriel (Sheila McCarthy), who has held her ragtag group together on the promise of leading them to salvation. Sarah must not only navigate the dangers of the unforgiving world, but decide who she can trust when everyone is out for their own survival.

The Well is going to feel very familiar to anyone who has been watching the deluge of post-apocalyptic movies and shows released over the past decade. It doesn’t really offer anything new or unique, the plot largely unfolding as you would expect with characters that won’t stick with you too long afterward the closing credits. While it is well shot and acted, The Well ’s limited budget keeps the action in the woods. The film’s pace is slow, and it doesn’t really create much tension along the way. I like the idea of the world that The Well is trying to create, I just wish it offered up something more entertaining or memorable.

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Jim "The Don" Mcleod has been reading horror for over 35 years, and reviewing horror for over 16 years. When he is not spending his time promoting the horror genre, he is either annoying his family or mucking about with his two dogs Casper and Molly.

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