Slave traders bring back an evil voodoo entity that is accidentally freed by the Confederate army during the Civil War. The entity possesses the bodies of the dead soldiers to create an army... Read allSlave traders bring back an evil voodoo entity that is accidentally freed by the Confederate army during the Civil War. The entity possesses the bodies of the dead soldiers to create an army of its own bent on conquest, using the corpses of both the North and South.Slave traders bring back an evil voodoo entity that is accidentally freed by the Confederate army during the Civil War. The entity possesses the bodies of the dead soldiers to create an army of its own bent on conquest, using the corpses of both the North and South.
A.J. Langer
- Thomas, the drummer boy
- (as Allison 'A.J.' Langer)
- Director
- Writer
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Set during the American civil war, The Killing Box tells the tale of a Union expedition sent to discover the fate of a group of Union soldiers slaughtered in bizarre circumstances. As the film progresses, it becomes evident that this slaughter isn't just an isolated incident, but rather a series of mass murders of both Union and Confederate soldiers. To complicate the expedition, the Union soldiers have to rely on the aid of a captured Union defector to help investigate the incident. Who or what can be responsible for these grizzly deaths?
The Killing Box takes a fairly well-worn horror/supernatural concept, but turns the concept around by putting the film in the unique setting of the American civil war. The film and its concept had me hooked for the first fifteen minutes, although my attention began to slip away a bit from that point on once the "enemy" was revealed. Quite frankly, the "enemy" were very hokey, and didn't instill any real fear or suspense into the story. I've seen actors at a horror-themed dinner theatre inspire more terror than what the Union soldiers faced in The Killing Box.
Overall The Killing Box tried to be an interesting war/horror hybrid, but fell short of the mark.
5/10
The Killing Box takes a fairly well-worn horror/supernatural concept, but turns the concept around by putting the film in the unique setting of the American civil war. The film and its concept had me hooked for the first fifteen minutes, although my attention began to slip away a bit from that point on once the "enemy" was revealed. Quite frankly, the "enemy" were very hokey, and didn't instill any real fear or suspense into the story. I've seen actors at a horror-themed dinner theatre inspire more terror than what the Union soldiers faced in The Killing Box.
Overall The Killing Box tried to be an interesting war/horror hybrid, but fell short of the mark.
5/10
The creative initial idea of an unstoppable army of Union and Confederate resurrected dead soldiers, gets trampled under the weight of it's limited budget, heavy handed direction, and chop shop editing. Many scenes are way too dark for interpretation of the action, while quite a bit of lines are garbled and incomprehensible. Character development is rushed and not acceptable. Other than the fresh concept of supernatural - Civil War genre mixing, there is little here to like. Billy Bob Thornton is wasted in a very small role, and Martin Sheen seems to be doing out takes from Gettysburg. "Grey Knight" should be considered more a curiosity than anything else, because it is simply too muddled and cannot be recommended as entertainment. - MERK
What at first seems like a civil war flick turns into a reasonably good horror/supernatural film with better than average production values. The strange mix of Vampire folklore, Voodoo and Zombie elements aside, The Killing Box manages to rise above many horror films and put forth a powerful anti slavery message for good measure. Definately recommeneded though unlikely to be found easily except on late night TV.
Lots of celebrities made this movie just to pay the bills. The tv guide channel called it "Lost Brigade", opening credits called it "The Killing Box". Here it's found as "Grey Knight", but the vcr (?) box image shows it as "Ghost Brigade". My guess is that nobody wants to admit involvement.
All that being said, this civil war zombie movie is adequately made for background entertainment while seeing many stars in lesser roles, like watching reruns of Nash Bridges or Macgiver.
No rotten zombie makeovers, just face paint like a Native American, Cajun voodoo mixture.
All that being said, this civil war zombie movie is adequately made for background entertainment while seeing many stars in lesser roles, like watching reruns of Nash Bridges or Macgiver.
No rotten zombie makeovers, just face paint like a Native American, Cajun voodoo mixture.
The plot comes in a distant 2nd or 3rd in this movie, just watching some people run around in the wild, it ends up feeling a lot like a stage act. The uniforms and accents are decently portrayed. Martin Sheen does a great job at narration which adds much needed depth to the events and characters that the weak storyboard fails at. The directing and music isn't bad and at times I found it easy to nod off. But when you consider the general entertainment value instilled in this movie its still good.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film has been released under four different titles: "The Lost Brigade," "Ghost Brigade," "Grey Knight," and "The Killing Box."
- Alternate versionsThe movie was originally titled 'Grey Knight' and was screened at some festivals in 1993. Allegedly, after some previews (most notably one for USA network executives), the producer (Brad Krevoy) was led to believe the movie was "too artsy" and ordered it re-cut. The producer's cut was released as 'The Killing Box' in Europe and as 'Ghost Brigade' in America (though the laserdisc 'Ghost Brigade' is 'Grey Night' with only its title changed). The director's cut was released on DVD in 2005 under its original title 'Grey Knight'.
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,200,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 22m(82 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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