![]() Sleep No More is an ambitious horror-thriller that pays homage to an underutilized sub-genre in effective fashion while leaving a runner or two on base, despite all-around excellent performances from a young cast. There are, however, a couple of moments of excellent gore that work on a visceral level. Something a little more practical would have been the icing on the cake from an SFX standpoint. The look of the creatures is a bit vanilla, a CGI creation of inky black smoke and fiery skull countenance. Sleep No More is made for a true surround sound experience. The creatures produce plenty of auditory tricks of their own. The score is something of an entity of its own, at times reminiscent of The Thing, broken by interludes of well known ‘80s pop. The visuals are tight and claustrophobic, with most of the action taking place indoors in a centrally located space. The message is simple and timeless, though: human beings aren’t meant to meddle in certain areas, and maybe science isn’t meant to unlock every mystery. It’s a cleverly written and constructed premise that (to the best of my knowledge, anyways) hasn’t been used before. Whatley’s ill-fated experiment is screwing up. The creatures that everyone is seeing are not hallucinations but pissed off beings that don’t appreciate being deprived of their food source – your dreams! That’s right…they’ve always been with us in a symbiotic relationship that Dr. While the premise may not be the most stunningly original thing ever captured by a camera lens, the reason behind the horrors and the explanation thereof is unique. If anything, it’s a more fitting (and obviously horror-centric) companion piece than the awful 2017 remake. The beats are very similar without being any kind of ripoff. There’s a quirky comic-relief guy – you get the idea. There’s a relationship between the doc and the male lead. These are grad students going off the reservation and conducting a clandestine experiment with potentially mind-altering and/or lethal results. Clearly there is some inspiration here, but the homage aspect of Sleep No More is much more in the vein of the classic 1990 thriller, Flatliners. What have they tapped into?īy now, virtually everyone has seen the infamous Russian Sleep Experiment Creepypasta that’s been circulating the internet for a few years. Unfortunately, they’re all seeing terrifying apparitions as the threshold approaches. Their goal is to stay awake 200 hours, thereby reaching the point of lucidity and a new awakening. Her subjects are a group of graduate students- Joe (Keli Price, The Sound of Magic), Frannie (Brea Grant, Dead Night), Dale (Stephen Ellis, Delivery Man), and Holly (Christine Dwyer, Jesus Christ Superstar Live in Concert). The aim of the study is “cure sleep” and open a new stage of human evolution, one that sees human beings increasing mental capacity and productivity. Whatley (Yasmine Aker, 12 Strong) is leading a groundbreaking experiment in sleep deprivation/elimination using a new drug called Cogniphan. What if you could go without it for long enough to awaken a new stage of evolution, though? Would you? Should you? That’s the question director Phillip Guzman ( Dead Awake) tackles in Sleep No More.ĭr. Sleep is where the best healing takes place, mentally and physically. It’s a precious commodity that you literally cannot be deprived of for long without suffering some terrible side effects. There are very few aspects of the human condition that are as analyzed and studied as sleep.
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