Entertainment
Extremely R-Rated 90s Sci-Fi Thriller Is Alien Meets Freddy Krueger
By Robert Scucci
| Published

Experimenting on human test subjects in an underground bunker doubling as a research facility is never an easy job. You have to ration your food, cope with the fact that you may not see natural light for some time, and, in the case of 1990’s Shadowzone, deal with a disembodied entity calling himself John Doe who starts killing everybody in sight whenever he pleases. He has Freddy Krueger-like powers in the sense that he can turn your biggest fears into reality before he starts lopping off appendages and continuing his rampage.
That’s truly the best way to describe Shadowzone. Its setting is reminiscent of the Nostromo in 1979’s Alien, and its antagonist is some sort of otherworldly demon hellbent on destroying the mortal realm, or at the very least eliminating the present company until he’s strong enough to breach the compound.
It’s one of those low-budget ‘90s sci-fi flicks best watched late at night in a pitch-black room with a solid pair of headphones. The gore borders on schlocky, but it’s impressive for a film with an estimated budget of $1 million. The only warning I have about Shadowzone is that it shows its monster in the third act, which takes away from an otherwise perfect sci-fi thriller rooted in horror. Sometimes what you imagine is more terrifying than what you see on screen, and that’s exactly what happens here.
We’re Trapped In A Plant Down Under
Shadowzone, like Alien and A Nightmare on Elm Street, boasts a shockingly simple premise executed to perfection. The whole thing kicks off under suspicious circumstances when NASA Captain Hickock (David Beecroft) shows up at an underground research facility known as Project Shadowzone to investigate a death that may very well compromise the experiment led by Dr. Van Fleet (James Hong), and facilitated by his assistant Dr. Erhardt (Louise Fletcher), medical examiner Dr. Kidwell (Shawn Weatherly), and computer engineer Wiley (Miguel A. Nunez Jr.). Helping out with non-scientific matters are maintenance man Tommy Shivers (Frederick Flynn) and foul-mouthed, verbally abusive facility cook, Mrs. Cutter (Lu Leonard).
The human experiments conducted in the facility involve a controversial Extended Deep Sleep (EDS) treatment that already claimed one test subject’s life. Captain Hickock is assured by the crew that the death was purely coincidental and happened in spite of the experiments, not because of them. Doing his due diligence, Hickock forces them to recreate the experiment under the same parameters as the previously fatal test so he can leave with a clean conscience, knowing the experiments can continue without outside interference.
As luck would have it, the male test subject’s head explodes and the entire facility blacks out. Wiley is shocked to learn that an entity identifying himself as John Doe is hiding among them, which is especially bad news because the entire facility goes on lockdown whenever traces of radiation are detected, and John Doe is carrying enough to trigger the failsafe.
Slowly but surely, John Doe, who apparently came through some kind of opened dream gateway, begins interacting with the physical world, using everybody’s fears against them while growing stronger by the minute. Trapped inside Project Shadowzone, Captain Hickock has to figure out not only a plan of attack against the entity, but also how to escape the compound in one piece before everybody inside gets ripped to shreds.
Hate To Say I Told You Doe
The name of the game in Shadowzone is hubris in all its forms. The only truly innocent person here is Captain Hickock, whose entire job is shutting down projects deemed harmful, and he has every reason to believe this one is. Dr. Erhardt, fittingly portrayed by Louise Fletcher, channels serious Nurse Ratched (One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest) energy, and she’s awful to everybody around her. She also knows how dangerous the situation is, but continues working alongside the equally idiotic Dr. Van Fleet, who understands he’s playing with fire but can’t help himself in pursuit of his sleep experiment. Wiley and Dr. Kidwell occasionally push back, but it’s clear they’re mostly complicit.
What really makes Shadowzone a treat, though, is its willingness to fully embrace the grit. It’s a low-budget movie, but the gore is exactly the kind of gore I look for in movies like this. It’s over the top, but in a way that keeps you from wanting to throw up in your mouth. It gets the point across without making your skin crawl because it’s almost cartoonish in its delivery.
The film’s biggest failing is showing a personified version of John Doe. The creature effects aren’t terrible, but the movie is far more terrifying when we don’t know what the monster looks like. Fortunately, we don’t get too many sequences featuring this version of John Doe, and the scenes where he taunts everybody through the facility’s computers are much more effective.
The film also makes the incredibly smart choice not to show too many on-screen deaths. You get the setup, the looks of terror, the blood splatter, and the body. In most cases, that’s the way to go because your imagination fills in the blanks. Watching a movie with bargain-bin production values try to fully stage elaborate kills usually undermines the fear it’s trying to create. Aside from John Doe himself, there’s not much here that takes you out of the movie, which makes Shadowzone all the more enjoyable.
As of this writing, you can stream the 88-minute theatrical cut of Shadowzone for free on Tubi. The 110-minute director’s cut is also streaming free with ads on Prime Video, though the general consensus is that the theatrical cut is the superior version.
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