Seed (2007 film)

Seed

Film poster
Directed by Uwe Boll
Produced by Uwe Boll
Dan Clarke
Shawn Williamson
Written by Uwe Boll
Starring Will Sanderson
Michael Paré
Ralf Möller
Jodelle Ferland
Thea Gill
Andrew Jackson
Music by Jessica de Rooij
Cinematography Mathias Neumann
Edited by Karen Porter
Production
company
Boll KG Productions
Pitchblack Pictures
Distributed by Vivendi Entertainment
Release dates
  • April 27, 2007 (2007-04-27) (Germany)
Running time
90 minutes
Country Canada
Language English
Budget $10 million

Seed is a 2007 Canadian horror film written, produced, and directed by Uwe Boll.[1] Filming ran from July 17 to August 11, 2006 in British Columbia, Canada, on a $10 million budget.

Plot

As a boy, a reclusive and antisocial Sufferton resident, Max Seed, was disfigured in a school bus crash that killed everyone else involved in it. In 1973, Seed began torturing and murdering people, filming some of his victims starving to death in his locked basement, and ultimately racking up a bodycount of 666. In 1979, Seed is arrested by Detective Matt Bishop in a siege that claims the lives of five of Bishop's fellow officers. Seed is sentenced to death by electric chair, and incarcerated on an island prison, where he is a model inmate, only acting out when he kills three guards who try to rape him.

On Seed's execution date, the electric chair fails to kill him after two shocks. Not wanting Seed to be released due to a state law that says any convicted criminal who survives three jolts of 15,000 volts each for 45 seconds walks, the prison staff and Bishop declare Seed dead and bury him alive in the prison cemetery. A few hours later, Seed digs his way out of his grave and returns to the prison, where he kills the executioner, doctor, and warden before swimming back to the mainland. The next day, while investigating the massacre, Bishop realizes Seed was responsible when he discovers the serial killer's empty cemetery plot.

Over the course of several months Seed kills dozens of people, with one long shot showing him beating a bound woman with a lumberjack's axe for five straight minutes. One day, a videotape showing Bishop's house is sent to the detective's office. Knowing this means Seed is going to go after his family, Bishop races home, finding his wife, Sandy, and daughter, Emily, gone, and the four officers charged with guarding the house dismembered in the bathroom.

Driving to Seed's old residence, Bishop is lured into a basement room containing a television and a video camera, and locked inside. The television turns on, and depicts Seed with Sandy and Emily. Emily informs Bishop that Seed wants Bishop to shoot himself. When Bishop hesitates, Seed kills Sandy with a nail gun, prompting Bishop into shooting himself in the head, believing that doing so will make Seed release his daughter. Instead, Seed takes the daughter to the room containing her father's corpse, and locks her in it. As Emily sobs for her parents, the film ends.

Cast

Release

The film was shown on the Weekend of Fear Festival in Erlangen, Germany on April 27, 2007. Director Uwe Boll was there to present the film and also to answer questions. Before the film started Boll emphasized the brutality of the film. Furthermore, he pointed out that PETA, who receive 2.5% of worldwide sales of the film, made archival recordings of animal cruelty available for the use in Seed's introduction,[2] though this footage was obscured on-screen. Boll stated that this alteration had occurred in the processing laboratory without his knowledge.

Awards

Sequel

A sequel, directed by Marcel Walz and entitled Blood Valley: Seed's Revenge, was released in 2014. It was produced by Boll, and stars Caroline Williams, Christa Campbell, Nick Principe, Jared Demetri Luciano, Manoush, Natalie Scheetz, Annika Strauss, and Sarah Hayden.[3]

References

  1. Peter Brown, "Exclusive Interview: Director Uwe Boll Plants a SEED and can take a Punch – Part Two," iFMagazine.com (10/9/2008)
  2. http://www.peta.de/seed SEED - Ein Horrorfilm, der den Tieren hilft (Seed: A Horror-Film that helps animals)
  3. "Seeds Planted for Seed 2: The New Breed". Dread Central. 13 May 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
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