Shut Movie
Storyline
TAGLINES
Some doors should stay closed
Malcolm Bricks (Lee Collin Baxter) wakes up in a nightmare of blood and betrayal. The bunker he is trapped in was the scene of a brutal crime shortly before. The results are three dead bodies and a mysterious bag. Malcolm has barely any memories about his part in this game. Is he a killer, as his partner Trent Richards (Paul Glaser) tells him while he slowly bleeds to death?
| Lee Baxter | James |
| Ray Strachan | Dylan |
| Fiana de Guzman | Jess Corman |
| Paul Glaser | Trent Richards |
| Jeff Caster | Detective Mike Finn |
| David Masterson | Charlie Corman |
| Julia Casper | Jules Campbell |
| Byron van Jones | Ian 'Hawk' Kinley |
| Ryan Saklofsky | Simon Grant |
| Nikolas Gerdell | Steven Leary |
| Stephan Arensmeier-Riva | Gabriel O'Sullivan |
| Michael Chateau | Tom Romita |
| Moritz Ohlsen |
Visitor Reviews
Less than stellar Brit-crime
posted on 05 Jun 2009Maybe it's unfair to label this as British? A good number of the actors are from the UK, but the movie says it was filmed in Germany. Keeping with what seems to be a German theme, virtually every actor has a different accent. Not terribly disorienting, I have always found that annoying. Especially when a brother and sister have two totally different accents (as is the case here). When that happens, you know you're in trouble.Shut is pretty middle of the road as far as I'm concerned. The story is OK, but just OK. You'll spend the whole movie waiting for some plot twist or a good action sequence and then you'll be sadly disappointed when there isn't one. Or at least I was. But for what it is, a movie made on the cheap, it's...well...let's say it's "acceptable". None of the actors really stand out and the story is pretty lacking, but it's not without it's (slight) charm. Maybe a decent way to kill a rainy Sunday afternoon, but that's really about all the endorsement I'm willing to give it.



I never cared enough to sort out what was going on
posted on 27 Jun 2009Guy wakes up in a bunker unable to get out, not sure entirely what happened with a dying friend as his only companion. As the film progresses we get flashbacks to what happened as well as the introduction of additional characters who are all looking for the stolen loot. Confused film never really grabbed me. Its the sort of film that you have to work with to get anything out of since the film is jumping through time, but at the same time it breaks the cardinal rule of films of this type, namely you must be intriguing enough to warrant making the effort to put the story together. I was never engaged enough and after a short while I found myself lost because my attention wandered off. Well done I suppose, but not something I really needed to waste time with.