Savaged
Dir: Michael S.
Ojeda
Starring: Amanda
Adrienne, Tom Ardavany, Ronnie Gene Blevins, and Rodney Rowland
95 Min
Revenge films are one of the gold standard subgenres in
horror, especially ones with female protagonist committing all manner of
gruesome violence against the people, usually men, which have assaulted her.
Director Michael S. Ojeda crafts his version a little different, this time with
a supernatural twist that involves the possession of a deaf, and left for dead,
woman by the spirit of a Native American warrior who is seeking revenge. Ojeda
doesn’t try to reinvent the genre but instead makes a vicious and inventive film
that is a recent standout in the oversaturated category.
Zoe (Amanda Adrienne) is on a road trip across the desert
making her way to an eager boyfriend. Zoe, who stops to take pictures of the
landscape, witnesses a young Native American man running for his life from a
gang of men chasing him in a truck. Zoe intervenes, trying to get the young man
into her car, but is halted by the murderous group who kill the young man in
front of her. They kidnap, brutally assault, and bury her in a shallow grave.
Her body is found by a medicine man who brings her back from death, however she
does not come back alone. The vengeful spirit of an Apache warrior has
possessed her body.
These kinds of films have the potential to wane into
exploitative territory rather quickly. Some promptly moving away from the slim
narrative purpose into full-blown movements of gore and violence. “Savaged”
isn’t much different in this regard; the violence turns sadistic and brutal
before the 10-minute mark of the film. However, director Michael S. Ojeda
shifts the narrative by utilizing other subgenres of horror to assist in
transitioning the customary revenge film into one with zombie and spirit
possession conventions. What would have otherwise turned routine and monotonous
becomes an inventive morphing of familiar themes. Zoe turns brutal, attacking
her attackers with stereotypical Native American weaponry, bows and arrows and
tomahawks. While these demonstrations walk the fine line of cultural
sensitivity, insulting Native American typecasts are still prevalent even in
big budget productions but here the offensive material is utilized to further
condemn the antagonists that have wronged both Zoe and the spirit.
Amanda Adrienne may not look intimidating but her performance
will deem otherwise. She turns from helpless to hardened convincingly but also
commits physically to the demanding tasks. The remaining cast, all men and
mostly villains, are given minimal amounts of character development. Besides
Marc Anthony Samuel, who plays Zoe’s boyfriend Dane, most of the remaining cast
is nothing but hate filled scoundrels.
“Savaged” takes a very common genre theme and attempts to do
something different with it. While nothing is necessarily surprising, the film
is paced well and has enough genre attributes to keep the horror enthusiasts appeased.
Monte’s Rating
3.50 out of 5.00
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