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The Divide is a 2011 American apocalyptic science fiction horror film directed by Xavier Gens and written by Karl Mueller and Eron Sheean. [3] [4] [5] The film stars Lauren German, Michael Biehn, Milo Ventimiglia, and Rosanna Arquette. [6]
The Divide: Directed by Xavier Gens. With Lauren German, Michael Biehn, Milo Ventimiglia, Courtney B. Vance. Survivors of a nuclear attack are grouped together for days in the basement of their apartment building, where fear and dwindling supplies wear away at their dynamic.
- (39K)
- Drama, Horror, Sci-Fi
- Xavier Gens
- 2012-04-20
I think if this movie shed it’s 2011 styling and artistic design choices it could be a legitimate classic. If you’ve seen this movie you know exactly what I’m talking about, unnecessary CGI sequences, heavy-handed & on the nose writing, and the use of the “f-slur” is rampant and pointless.
- Plot
- Cast
- External Links
As nuclear explosions ravage New York City, residents of an apartment block rush downstairs to escape from the building, only to be forced into the basement by further explosions. Only eight of the residents - Eva (Lauren German) and her boyfriend Sam (Ivan Gonzalez), Josh (Milo Ventimiglia) and his brother Adrien (Ashton Holmes), Josh's friend Bob...
Lauren German as EvaMichael Biehn as MickeyMilo Ventimiglia as JoshThe Divide (2011) at the Internet Movie DatabaseThe Divide at WikipediaThe Divide (2011) at Rotten TomatoesThe Divide (2011) at AllMovieIf you're in the mood for a horror film, and not goofy horror like The Nun, but horror intended to disgust and y'know, horrify, then I cannot recommend The Divide enough. This movie perfectly pulls of its purpose of inducing feelings of disgust, sympathy, and despair.
The film immediately opens on a nuclear bombing of New York City that sends a group of tenants and their salty, tough-as-nails super, Mickey (Michael Biehn, yes, THAT Michael Biehn) into an improvised fallout shelter in the building’s basement.
Dec 7, 2012 · Not so much a horror film as a story of Nuclear Holocaust survival (or George Romero meets “Lord of the Flies”), this offering from director Xavier Gens (“Hitman”) is nonetheless a frightening, extremely unpleasant, and gruelling experience. I’m not exactly sure I liked it, but I’m not sure if I was even meant to.