The Quiet Earth Movie Review
The Quiet Earth Review
"The Quiet Earth" Overview

Rating: R
1985
Cast and Crew
Director : Geoff MurphyProducer : Sam Pillsbury,Don Reynolds
Screenwiter : Bill Baer,Bruno Lawrence,Sam Pillsbury
Starring : Bruno Lawrence,Alison Routledge,Pete Smith
Post-apocalypse movies aren't exactly scarce. Even down under has more than its
fair share of these films: The Road Warrior being the prime example of the
genre.
The Quiet Earth takes a much softer and less explosive route to examining life
beyond the pale. Here we have New Zealander Zac Hobson (Bruno Lawrence), who
awakes one morning to find he's the only guy around. Literally. The rest of
humanity -- and all animal life, it seems -- has simply vanished. Zac spends
the following days in predictable stages of coping: Confusion, research,
gluttony, insanity, and rebuilding -- until a fetching second survivor, Joanne
(Alison Routledge), shows up at his place.
Just when you think the movie is going to turn into a love story (blech!),
director Geoff Murphy spuns the film into a new direction: A third survivor is
found along with a cause for why they managed to survive and a theory about why
"the effect" occurred. The end plays out as the trio races against time to stop
the universe from ripping apart completely.
Heavy stuff, and Murphy does amazing work with a deft script that, despite
minimal dialogue and even fewer characters, keeps you engaged for its full
running time and, incredibly, leaves you wanting more at the end. Murphy's
later credits (Young Guns II, Under Siege 2) wouldn't indicate such an ability
to produce powerful action/thriller/dramas on a tiny budget -- and my, what
special effects! that score! -- but never you mind. The Quiet Earth is a cult
classic of the good variety. There's not a moment of schlock or goofiness, and
its topic (a metaphor for nuclear annihilation) is just as prescient today.
Check out the new DVD, which features a helpful and lively commentary track.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



