- A Man is Trapped in a Porta-Potty in HOLY SHIT! Trailer
- Teaser Trailer for PREY, Latest Predator Movie
- Teaser Trailer for Netflix's RESIDENT EVIL Series
- A tale of disappearance and horror in YELLOWBRICKROAD
- A tale of disappearance and horror in YELLOWBRICKROAD
- New EVENT HORIZON 4K Steelbook Available Now
- AVATAR 2: THE WAY OF WATER Trailer
- Stop-Motion Madness! Phil Tippett's MAD GOD Premieres on Shudder in June
- THE BOOK OF THE NEW SUN Series Blends Post-Apocalypse with Epic Fantasy
- THE BOOK OF THE NEW SUN Series Blends Post-Apocalypse with Epic Fantasy
- Re: Occupation, Australian Sci Fi movie
- Slice of Life, Blade Runner inspired short
- Is Snowpeircer a sequel to Willy Wonka?
- Re: Yesterday
- Re: Yesterday
- Yesterday
- Re: White Night (or where do I get my 30 + from now?)
- Re: White Night (or where do I get my 30 + from now?)
- Re: White Night (or where do I get my 30 + from now?)
- Re: White Night (or where do I get my 30 + from now?)
- First Poster for Anticipated Apocalyptic Thriller VESPER
- Teaser Trailer for Netflix's RESIDENT EVIL Series
- Here's What's On Blu-ray and 4K This Week! [May 10, 2022]
- THE BOOK OF THE NEW SUN Series Blends Post-Apocalypse with Epic Fantasy
- Turbo Kid Directors Apating THE ZOMBIES THAT ATE THE WORLD Comic Series
- Proto-Cyberpunk & Post-Apocalypse Meet in MONDOCANE [Trailer]
- Here's the WYRMWOOD: APOCALYPSE Trailer!
- Watch Richard Stanley's Rare Super 8 Version of Hardware called
- Epic Destruction in RESTART THE EARTH Trailer
- Carriers Directors David Pastor and Àlex Pastor Are Filming a BIRD BOX Spin-Off
- Richard Stanley's HARDWARE Continues as a Comic!
- VIFF 2021: THE IN-LAWS, MIRACLE, SALOUM, SECRETS FROM PUTUMAYO [Capsule Reviews]
- TIFF 2021: SILENT NIGHT Review
- VIFF 2021: Documentary Preview [Capsule Reviews]
- TIFF 2021: THE PINK CLOUD, THE HOLE IN THE FENCE [Capsule Reviews]
- TIFF 2021: JAGGED Review
- TIFF 2021: SUNDOWN Review
- VIFF 2021: Animation Preview [Capsule Reviews]
- SAINT-NARCISSE is Bruce LaBruce at His Most Accomplished [Review]
- TIFF 2021: DASHCAM Review
- TIFF 2021: THE DAUGHTER Review
- Trailer for Sci-Fi Prison Thriller CORRECTIVE MEASURES
- This Week on Blu-ray and DVD! [April 19, 2022]
- Disturbing Teaser for David Cronenberg's CRIMES OF THE FUTURE
- CHILDREN OF SIN Spooks up Amazon April 22
- Proto-Cyberpunk & Post-Apocalypse Meet in MONDOCANE [Trailer]
- This Week on 4K, Blu-ray and DVD! [April 12, 2022]
- Paul Schrader Penned THERE ARE NO SAINTS Trailer
- Full STRANGER THINGS Season 4 Trailer
- 3-Disc TOMBS OF THE BLIND DEAD Coming from Synapse Films
- This Week on Blu-ray & DVD [April 5, 2022]
- DOG SOLDIERS Collector's Edition 4K Blu-ray on the Way from Scream Factory
- Famous First Films: Robert Eggers' HANSEL AND GRETEL
- ‘Squid Game’ Director's Next is KLLING OLD PEOPLE CLUB
- Choose or Die: Netflix Movie Features a Killer Text Adventure Game
- New this week on Blu-ray and DVD! [March 29, 2022]
- Trailer for Horror Maestro Gustavo Hernandez's VIRUS:32
- V/H/S/94 Blu-ray Details Unearthed from RLJ
- Trailer for Atmospheric SHEPHERD
- Here's the WYRMWOOD: APOCALYPSE Trailer!
- The GOAT Returns! Panos Cosmatos' Next Is Sci-Fi Fantasy NEKROKOSM
Jack In
Latest Comments
Latest Forum Posts
PA News
Latest Reviews
Older News
Crew
Marina Antunes
Editor in Chief
Vancouver, British Columbia
Christopher Webster
Managing Editor
Edmonton, Alberta
DN aka quietearth
Founder / Asst. Managing Editor
Denver, Colorado
Simon Read
UK Correspondent
Edinburgh, Scotland
Rick McGrath
Toronto Correspondent
Toronto, Ontario
Manuel de Layet
France Correspondent
Paris, France
rochefort
Austin Correspondent
Austin, Texas
Daniel Olmos
Corrispondente in Italia
Italy
Griffith Maloney aka Griffith Maloney
New York Correspondent
New York, NY
Stephanie O
Floating Correspondent
Quiet Earth Bunker
Jason Widgington
Montreal Correspondent
Montreal, Quebec
Carlos Prime
Austin Correspondent
Austin, TX
Latest news








[Craig DiLouie is the author of many post-apocalyptic and horror novels including Suffer the Children, Tooth and Nail and The Infection series]
THE ROVER, starring Guy Pearce and Robert Pattinson (of TWILIGHT fame), is an Australian dystopian film set 10 years after a global economic collapse. The collapse has eliminated government services, reduced the population to barely subsistent poverty, and virtually destroyed law and order. The only visible signs of a functioning government are small military units that patrol trying to save whatever law and order is left.
The film starts off with Eric (played with a smoldering intensity by Pearce), a former soldier and farmer who’s lost everything but remembers, with endless regret and rage, how things were before everything went to shit. He roams the poor towns and the desolation in between.
When he stops at one town, his car is stolen by a group of men who’d committed some crime and gotten their truck stuck on some debris. Eric sets out in pursuit but is beaten on the road and left by the men. Then he comes across one of the men’s brother, a young man named Rey (effectively but sometimes a bit gratingly played by Pattinson) with a somewhat feeble mind, who was left behind, gutshot. Eric gets him patched up and off they go in pursuit to retrieve Eric’s car and deliver his own justice.
This is an interesting film on a lot of levels. It’s a slow burn, sometimes a very slow burn, but it does very well at maintaining its tension, and the random violence that occurs in such a harsh world is realistic and sudden.
The soundtrack excellently heightens the tension as if betraying the seething state of Eric’s bitter mind. That being said, while the film has been compared to MAD MAX, don’t expect breathless car chases and action sequences. This is a character driven film, and Pearce is doing the driving. He plays Eric with an amazing level of barely restrained ferocity. He’s our hero, but he doesn’t owe you a damn thing. Just the way he stares at times makes you believe anything can happen, and it often does. Eric is a dark, violent and brooding anti-hero, haunted by his crimes for which there would be no punishment, and enraged by his lack of punishment–living in a world where such a thing was now possible–more than the bad things he actually did in the past. Over time, his growing bond and trust with Rey softens him a bit (even the music softens and surprisingly turns to a pop hit on the radio, again echoing his state of mind, as if he’s slowly being pulled back into the man he once was). Though sadly, he appears to be using Rey, however reluctantly by the end. His only major moment of humanization comes in the final scene, when we finally find out why he wanted his car back so badly. Rather than MAD MAX (though I see the resemblance), this film is more like a noirish Western set in a dystopian future.
The dystopia itself is an interesting element in the film. Everybody’s selling something, including themselves, and there are even some shops selling dirty wares while protecting themselves with shotguns. Australian money is almost worthless now, and many shops want U.S. dollars, hard to come by, for premium items such as gasoline. Justice is frontier justice. The military has been severely reduced and appears to be accomplishing little to maintain law and order. Everything is broken down. Mercenaries, presumably hired by corporations, ride as guards on commercial freight trains like something out of the Wild West. Overall, the world of THE ROVER is fairly realistic of what we could expect in such a collapse–the world would go on, people would survive, but they would do so in extreme poverty, with a subsistence economy. And with little policing and a dying government, violence would often be a matter of necessity to survive. Not something people want to do, but have to do, and over time it becomes the easy answer.
I highly recommend THE ROVER if you’re into post-apocalyptic film and looking for something that is a little offbeat, frighteningly realistic and strongly character-driven.
Recommended Release: The Rover
You might also like








Sandy (7 years ago) Reply
Worst movie I have seen in a long time.