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IMDbPro

Dying Breed

  • 2008
  • R
  • 1h 32min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,3/10
6,5 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Dying Breed (2008)
Dying Breed interweaves the two most fascinating icons of Tasmanian history: the extinct Tasmanian tiger and "The Pieman" (aka Alexander Pearce) who was hanged for cannibalism in 1824.
Reproducir trailer1:53
1 vídeo
20 imágenes
TerrorThriller

Añade un argumento en tu idiomaDying Breed interweaves the two most fascinating icons of Tasmanian history: the extinct Tasmanian tiger and "The Pieman" (aka Alexander Pearce) who was hanged for cannibalism in 1824. Again... Leer todoDying Breed interweaves the two most fascinating icons of Tasmanian history: the extinct Tasmanian tiger and "The Pieman" (aka Alexander Pearce) who was hanged for cannibalism in 1824. Against all odds, Pearce escaped from the most feared penal settlement of the British Empire - ... Leer todoDying Breed interweaves the two most fascinating icons of Tasmanian history: the extinct Tasmanian tiger and "The Pieman" (aka Alexander Pearce) who was hanged for cannibalism in 1824. Against all odds, Pearce escaped from the most feared penal settlement of the British Empire - Sarah Island - and disappeared into the impenetrable forests of Western Tasmania. Seven co... Leer todo

  • Dirección
    • Jody Dwyer
  • Guión
    • Michael Boughen
    • Jody Dwyer
    • Rod Morris
  • Reparto principal
    • Nathan Phillips
    • Leigh Whannell
    • Bille Brown
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    5,3/10
    6,5 mil
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Jody Dwyer
    • Guión
      • Michael Boughen
      • Jody Dwyer
      • Rod Morris
    • Reparto principal
      • Nathan Phillips
      • Leigh Whannell
      • Bille Brown
    • 39Reseñas de usuarios
    • 69Reseñas de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Dying Breed
    Trailer 1:53
    Dying Breed

    Imágenes19

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    Reparto principal28

    Editar
    Nathan Phillips
    Nathan Phillips
    • Jack
    Leigh Whannell
    Leigh Whannell
    • Matt
    Bille Brown
    • Harvey…
    Mirrah Foulkes
    Mirrah Foulkes
    • Nina
    Melanie Vallejo
    • Rebecca
    Kenneth Radley
    • Liam
    • (as Ken Radley)
    Elaine Hudson
    Elaine Hudson
    • Ethel
    Sheridan Harvey
    • Katie
    Peter Docker
    • Alexander Pierce
    Boris Brkic
    Boris Brkic
    • Sgt. Symons
    Phillip McInnes
    Phillip McInnes
    • Guard #1
    Ian 'Paddy' McIvor
    • Guard #2
    • (as Paddy McIvor)
    James Portanier
    • Guard #3
    Sally McDonald
    • Ruth
    Peter Finlay
    • Hunter #1
    Christopher Stevenson
    • Hunter #2
    Ian Scott
    • University Professor
    Des Fleming
    • Colleague #1
    • Dirección
      • Jody Dwyer
    • Guión
      • Michael Boughen
      • Jody Dwyer
      • Rod Morris
    • Todo el reparto y equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Reseñas de usuarios39

    5,36.4K
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    Reseñas destacadas

    Richardm777

    Great new Ozploitation

    Just saw Jody Dwyer's Dying Breed. What an excellent Australian Horror flick it is! It could well be one of my favourite Australian Films of the year.

    Four young cryptozoologists go to check out Western Tasmania in search of ye ol' Tasmanian Tiger. Little do they know they are stumbling upon the ancestors of Alexander Pearce, the famous Australian ex-convict, bush ranger and sometime cannibal known as the 'Pieman'. Suffice to say fine dining is loosed on the Pieman River as a group of Deliverance style in bred Tassie freaks hunt down our hapless Tiger hunters. Dying Breed is well cast with Leigh Whannell (Saw) giving us a great version of the metro-sexual out of his league in the wilds of Western Tasmania and Nathan Phillips (Wolf Creek) as a roustabout larrikin hunter. Whannel is an excellent leading man and should branch out from horror and do other serious work. The two girls Sally MacDonald and Melanie Vallejo are good too. Especially the later, when she is strung up and dismembered Cannibal Holocaust style out the back of the Pieman's shed. I'm sure Leigh Whannell must have been showing the director Cannibal Holocaust, as this scene certainly bears the imprint of that classic film and the Dying Breed scene is very well done in its brutality. The film has various very effective set pieces in a cave, at night in the bush, out the back of the killer's shed, on a bridge at dawn, etc. All shot effectively and scored very nicely. The ominous Tasmanian landscape evokes a darkness akin to what DH Lawrence said about the great primordial emptiness of the Australian bush. The film should travel well as the Aussie accents aren't too harsh, and one is a Irish accent. The family of inbred freaks are memorable and varied in their motivations and actions.

    Dying Breed is a great edgy genre piece that is one of the first to appear in the new wave of horror cannibal films, so its ahead of the game world wide, also. I would have to rate it right up there with Rogue from last year and Acolytes, Horseman and Rats and Cats.

    Why did they not enter it in MUFF? It would have won some awards! Check out the posters. I like the stylish one, while the second one with a gory pie will entice the teen market.

    Stylish new Ozploitation is on display, that gives hope to the future of the Australian Film Industry!
    6claudio_carvalho

    Things Have to Stay Hidden to Survive

    Between 1788 and 1868, Australia served as a penal colony for the British Empire and Tasmania was the most feared. The prisoner Alexander "The Pieman" Pearce escaped and survived in the woods eating human flesh. In the present days, the researcher Nina (Mirrah Foulkes) organizes an expedition to Tasmania to proceed the work of her deceased sister Ruth and find evidences of the extinct Tasmanian tiger in the wilderness. She travels to a remote area with her boyfriend Matt (Leigh Whannell) and his troublemaker friend Jack (Nathan Phillips) that brings his girlfriend Rebecca (Melanie Vallejo) and they spend the night in a village of descendants of "The Pieman". Sooner the quartet discovers that things have to stay hidden to survive.

    "Dying Breed" is another sub product of "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and gives the sensation of déjà vu to the viewer with the total lack of originality. There are many flaws in the predictable story, like for example, how could an expedition travel unarmed in a remote area in the wilderness? What would they expect while observing the wildlife? How can a group travel without a Plan B for unexpected situations? The greatest different in this feature is the wonderful location in Australia. Further, the acting is good and for fans of the slash genre, it entertains. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): Not Available
    5kannibalcorpsegrinder

    Fun if clichéd psycho family effort

    Searching the Australian outback, a group of friends out looking for a legendary animal instead stumble upon a group of deranged cannibals selling their victim's unused body parts and try to avoid becoming part of their spree.

    This was a pretty troubling and overall mixed affair. Among the numerous big flaws here is the fact that barely anything at all really happens in this one which draws the viewer in, where the majority of time here doesn't come off as enjoyable. A lot of this here is due to the group were forced to spend all the time with, who are an utterly annoying group that are completely unlikable that really wouldn't be friend as the wild, out-of-control jerk really shouldn't be with them as he would've prove tall that trust worthy in real-life. Acting like the stereotypical he-man macho jerk that has to be the leader of everything, bosses and beats-down everyone into seeing things his way and is such a general pain that he really wears himself out rapidly. That also plays a huge part of the film's first half pacing problems as not only is spending time here excruciating but their other antics are even less so, wandering through the endless miles of forest in their jeep or staying at the motel with the locals don't really have any really enjoyable sections. It's all filled with really uninteresting moments that simply drag this along, at a really slow pace due to these parts. There's also the rather troubling part here that all this manages to hold off the actual attacks until so late in the film that there's barely anytime here where the family actually goes about attacking them which causes the film some really troubled times here as there's so little time here spent with the main purpose of the film being them being stalked yet that can't happen with the film set-up the way it is. Even more troubling here is that the motivation for it all is yet another cliché of the inbred psychos looking for purity outside the clan which isn't all that original or unique and takes a lot of fear out of the family. These big flaws are damaging enough that the few positives here aren't enough to really make a dent, although they are noticeable. The film's biggest plus here is the rather fun and charged second half, where after they get past the dangers with the family and finally realize they're being chased as there's some really chilling work in the atmospheric forest as the first encounter by the cave where they encounter the cannibal patriarch who begins munching on the victim in the bushes the guide hikes them out through the forest into the dark, trap-filled mine and then the great encounter on the other side of the mountain. From finding the mutilated body of the guide alongside the remains of their friend and then encounter the shack in the woods where they have the gnawed bodies and skeletal pieces left behind there which sets up the truly chilling chase and eventual confrontation on the bridge which gives this some really fun times here. The only other enjoyable art here is the film's blood and gore, which not only come from the opening attack on the original member but the few small, bloody attacks here. These here make this enjoyable enough, but the flaws are just too detrimental.

    Rated R: Graphic Violence, Graphic Language, Brief Nudity, sexual content, a rape scene and graphic violence against animals.
    6Coventry

    The REAL Tasmanian Devils

    "Dying Breed" is a largely derivative and predictable Aussie horror flick that nevertheless benefices from a handful of marvelous elements, like a fascinating historical plot outline (albeit not at all accurate), breathtaking filming locations & scenery and a few unyielding shock sequences. The pivot character in "Dying Breed", even though he only briefly appears during the opening sequence, is Alexander Pearce a.k.a. "The Pieman". He was a cannibalistic murderer of Irish descent who got exiled to Tasmania to pay for the crimes he committed. Back in the early eighteen hundreds, when the whole of Australia was still a British prison colony and Tasmania an island where the heaviest cases were shipped off to, Alexander "Pieman" Pearce was the only convict how managed to escape and flee into the impenetrable Tasmanian forests. Obviously this plot outline isn't entirely accurate, as the real Pieman was in fact the nickname of a completely different prisoner and the real Alexander Pearce died at the gallows in 1824, but hey, it's a horror movie so everything goes. After the introduction of Pearce and the Tasmanian region, the plot resumes in present day Tasmania with the arrival of four twenty-something adventurers. Nina is a zoologist and wishes to continue the research of her sister who died here eight years ago whilst looking for last remaining species of the Tasmanian Tiger. She and her friends quickly discover that her sister didn't just drown, but fell victim to the bewildered and horribly inbred descendants of Alexander Pearce. They have only one goal in their miserable existence and that is to keep the bloodline alive. At the festival where I watched this movie, "Dying Breed" was exaggeratedly promoted like an Aussie interpretation of "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and "The Hills Have Eyes". Perhaps this is a fairly apt comparison, but stating something like that inevitably raises high expectations that "Dying Breed" can't possible fill in. Director Jody Dwyer does a reasonably good job, but he/she (?) yet doesn't succeed in generating an atmosphere of despair and sheer terror. It also takes slightly too long before the suspense and nastiness truly breaks loose. The first half of the film is overly stuffed with typical inbred jokes and stereotypical tourist behavior. There are a handful of downright disgusting sequences, notably a gruesome bear trap death sequence and a few close ups of pick-axes-in-the-head moments, which will undoubtedly appeal to the bloodhounds among us. The nature and wildlife images are dreamy to stare at and the acting performances are surprisingly above average. One of the lead actors is Leigh Whannell who, along with James Wan, created the original concept of "Saw".
    paul8878

    Boring and waste of time and money

    Dying Breed is a waste. It is very very little about Tasmanian Tigers and more of a redo of some other horror movies.

    Nothing new or different. Same old blood soaked chopping and slashing and women chasing.

    Tired story line. Young people lost in woods find weirdos who eat people. Seen it before many times. BORING.

    How to make a better movie. Drop the dumb dialogue, drop the dumb story line, get people who can act, they are called actors, less splash and more suspense, go back to telling an engaging story, and stop trying to be shocking. In fact, a good and well written movie would be shocking. Dying Breed sure was not anything worth seeing. The best part of dying breed were the few moments of the old (1930s) film clips of the Tasmaian Tiger

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que...?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      During the first seconds of the end credits just 1 or 2 frames show what Pieman's Pie really is made of.
    • Pifias
      While leaving the Water Rat Hotel at the start of the movie, a tram can be seen in the background and then disappears as the scene has been cut. Also this is supposed to be in Tasmania, they do not have Trams, this would of been filmed in Melbourne.
    • Citas

      Katie: Simple Simon met the pie man playing with a knife Said Simple Simon to the pie man, "Will you take my life?" Said the pie man to Simple Simon, "When the time is right" Said Simple Simon to the pie man, "Then I'll die tonight".

    • Conexiones
      Featured in At the Movies: Episodio #5.39 (2008)

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    Preguntas frecuentes17

    • How long is Dying Breed?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Who was the weird looking old guy at the end? Was he Alexander Pearce (the Pieman)?
    • What is the link between the townsfolk and the Tasmanian Tiger?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 6 de noviembre de 2008 (Australia)
    • País de origen
      • Australia
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official site
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • Títulos en diferentes países
      • Chiếc bánh chết chóc
    • Localizaciones del rodaje
      • Tasmania, Australia
    • Empresa productora
      • Ambience Entertainment
    • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • 3.000.000 AUD (estimación)
    • Recaudación en todo el mundo
      • 370.294 US$
    Ver información detallada de taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Duración
      1 hora 32 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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