Trailers
Description
As Shannon, a woman who wants to put her father's ashes away in the woods witnesses a corrupt cop dealing drugs with a junkie, she has to try and run away after she gets rampaged by two discreditable cops after they see her taking secret photographs of their crime maneuver. They then do a cat-and-mouse game around the woods as Shannon teams up with a retired sheriff along the way for more reinforcement. It's just a diversion of survival and egalitarianism.
Starring
Awards
Key opinion
Out of Death is widely regarded as a low-budget, hastily produced crime thriller that suffers from incoherent plotting and an over-reliance on Bruce Willis's limited screen time. While a minority of viewers appreciate its B-movie aesthetic and atmospheric Southern setting, the consensus dismisses the film as a lazy, cliché-ridden project that fails to deliver on acting or narrative substance.
| Acting | Bruce Willis delivers a minimal, unconvincing performance, with his limited one-day presence on set acting as a marketing gimmick rather than a substantial lead role. | |
| Screenplay | The script is universally panned for its trivial, cliché-heavy dialogue and illogical character motivations that result in a lack of narrative momentum. | |
| Production | Production quality is hampered by an extremely rushed shooting schedule and an amateurish approach that renders the drama incoherent and the overall effort lazy. | |
| Score | The film's use of Southern-inspired musical motifs and forest settings creates a cohesive, albeit crude, B-movie atmosphere that some find watchable, while others find it visually derivative. |