A brilliant scientist goes on the run instead of weaponizing his invention.A brilliant scientist goes on the run instead of weaponizing his invention.A brilliant scientist goes on the run instead of weaponizing his invention.
María Elisa Camargo
- Josey
- (as Maria Elisa Camargo)
Emily Brinks
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
Tremayne Cole
- Bar Patron
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I picked up Off The Grid thinking, "This could be good." This promised tension, action, and intrigue - all the ingredients for a decent watch. But what followed was one of the worst movie experiences I've sat through. And I've watched thousands.
The actor playing the "child catcher" was unintentionally comical - more pantomime villain than menacing threat. As for the so-called hero? Sure, he might look like a leading man, but any sense of screen presence or charisma was completely absent. A plank of wood might've offered more emotional range.
The plot? Barely there. The dialogue? Stiff and predictable. The pacing? Slower than a dial-up connection in 1998.
Do yourself a favour - stay clear.
You're welcome. ⭐
The actor playing the "child catcher" was unintentionally comical - more pantomime villain than menacing threat. As for the so-called hero? Sure, he might look like a leading man, but any sense of screen presence or charisma was completely absent. A plank of wood might've offered more emotional range.
The plot? Barely there. The dialogue? Stiff and predictable. The pacing? Slower than a dial-up connection in 1998.
Do yourself a favour - stay clear.
You're welcome. ⭐
Had so much potential. Soon as you see the bad guy, which is a cross between a B movie dracula and uncle fester who walks like he has a back problem you know it's going downhill. Beautiful back drops and scenery, good plot but the villain is awful and dont get me started on the awful centre greasy center parting they gave him. You will know what i mean when you see it.
The sheriff is equally bad, you just think seriously? Really? It's like it was directed by a primary school drama teacher who got fired for drinking on the job.
The "hero" isn't too bad apart from the cheesy scene in the bar. This could have been a great movie but you know exactly what's going to happen especially with the teenager. And how did this engineer suddenly have the skills of Arnie in Predator. Was he in the special forces before going into engineering? Good luck with this one.
The sheriff is equally bad, you just think seriously? Really? It's like it was directed by a primary school drama teacher who got fired for drinking on the job.
The "hero" isn't too bad apart from the cheesy scene in the bar. This could have been a great movie but you know exactly what's going to happen especially with the teenager. And how did this engineer suddenly have the skills of Arnie in Predator. Was he in the special forces before going into engineering? Good luck with this one.
Science meets survival, but the spark doesn't always catch. In Off the Grid, Josh Duhamel stars as a brilliant scientist who invents a handheld clean energy generator, only to flee into seclusion when a morally bankrupt corporation tries to weaponise his creation. With limited resources and a ticking clock, he transforms the wilderness into a science lab battleground... guerrilla warfare meets intellectual ingenuity .
The hook is irresistible: a man of unparalleled intellect forced into a physical test of survival. Yet after a gripping setup, the pace falters into clichés. Action lite sequences and low budget feel begin to undercut the initial promise .
Duhamel delivers steady, soldierly restraint, but it's Greg Kinnear as the conflicted corporate enforcer who surprises most. His morally torn characterization hints at layers deeper than the script explores. Peter Stormare also delivers textured menace as Belcor, the mercenary leader-his screen presence elevates scenes that otherwise feel rote.
Director Johnny Martin, reuniting with screenwriter Jim Agnew, keeps the tone taut, but the narrative lacks risk taking. The film tries to riff on modern paranoia... technology exploited, corporations unchecked but never fully commits, leaving a sense of thematic incompleteness
Visually, Off the Grid utilises its Mississippi wilderness setting nicely... crisp, moody, and with a strong sense of place. But when the story pivots to chase scenes and gunfights, it loses that atmospheric edge.
Verdict: Off the Grid is a neatly built survival thriller with an intriguing premise and strong cast moments. Yet despite its high-minded idea and a few sparks of tension, it never fully powers up.
Worth a rental night in for Duhamel's grit and Kinnear's conflicted charm, but don't expect a genre redefining grid breakout.
The hook is irresistible: a man of unparalleled intellect forced into a physical test of survival. Yet after a gripping setup, the pace falters into clichés. Action lite sequences and low budget feel begin to undercut the initial promise .
Duhamel delivers steady, soldierly restraint, but it's Greg Kinnear as the conflicted corporate enforcer who surprises most. His morally torn characterization hints at layers deeper than the script explores. Peter Stormare also delivers textured menace as Belcor, the mercenary leader-his screen presence elevates scenes that otherwise feel rote.
Director Johnny Martin, reuniting with screenwriter Jim Agnew, keeps the tone taut, but the narrative lacks risk taking. The film tries to riff on modern paranoia... technology exploited, corporations unchecked but never fully commits, leaving a sense of thematic incompleteness
Visually, Off the Grid utilises its Mississippi wilderness setting nicely... crisp, moody, and with a strong sense of place. But when the story pivots to chase scenes and gunfights, it loses that atmospheric edge.
Verdict: Off the Grid is a neatly built survival thriller with an intriguing premise and strong cast moments. Yet despite its high-minded idea and a few sparks of tension, it never fully powers up.
Worth a rental night in for Duhamel's grit and Kinnear's conflicted charm, but don't expect a genre redefining grid breakout.
It was a relatively fun ride, nothing really original, there were some moments of doubt. At about 1 hour and 20 min in, I was getting a little impatient, in fact I started to doze off. Anyways... Simple linear story, nothing too far fetched, easy to follow, Greg Kinear was fine, Josh played his role well, but overall it was a typical action movie with the ever so over done payoff, if your bored... give it a watch but don't go into this expecting a wild non stop action ride. The only reason I gave it a 6 star was "it was fun" just enough to keep you watching. If it wasn't cast with the 3 decent actors, I probably wouldn't have continued.
Such a waste of good talent. This was so amateur hour, it's like it was written and directed by a 5th grade drama class. The entire story was cliched with the worst parts of every other cat and mouse drama film, all dragged out with ridiculous scenes. Even the normally comfortable 104 min runtime felt like 4 hours of the same run hide catch run hide catch etc. The top cast was all decent considering what infantile script and directing they had to work with, with the exception of long greasy hair dude that was annoying af and unconvincing in his role. Skip this one, it barely qualifies as a watchable B movie.
Did you know
- SoundtracksSell My Soul
performed by Tom Bedlam
written by Kevin Qian (BMI)
published by Micdrop Talent (BMI)
courtesy of Micdrop Artists
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €12,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 44 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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