In the weeks following an apocalyptic event, a husband and wife venture across the countryside inhabited by deadly factions in search of safety, and must work together as they are pushed to ... Read allIn the weeks following an apocalyptic event, a husband and wife venture across the countryside inhabited by deadly factions in search of safety, and must work together as they are pushed to the breaking point in order to survive.In the weeks following an apocalyptic event, a husband and wife venture across the countryside inhabited by deadly factions in search of safety, and must work together as they are pushed to the breaking point in order to survive.
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe heavy metal song that Nina listens to in the hunting lodge is Slippin' the Stealth by Goatsnake.
- GoofsBlood appears on car windscreen as the bullet passes through it before the moment of impact into Nina's shoulder.
- Quotes
Crazy Al: [spoilers]
[Last line spoken in the movie over the end credits]
Crazy Al: [speaking on his radio broadcast] "Here's another safety update for all you domestics out there. Just when you thought you've heard it all, something like this comes along. Rumor has it, there's a husband and wife that just took out a platoon of Gamblers in Milwaukee, and they're heading west. Let this be a warning to all you gang banging sons of bitches, these two lovebirds ain't fucking around. You see, this is why I still have hope. Because amongst all the savagery, there are still the ones who love, and it's the ones who love that will change the motherfucking world."
- ConnectionsReferences Eyes Without a Face (1960)
- SoundtracksDrifting Heart
Written by Roosevelt Nettles (uncredited)
Performed by Roosevelt Nettles
The film follows Mark and Nina, a "married" couple who decide to make the 5-hour drive to Nina's parents house after her mother stops calling her. The problem is the world has gone to crap ever since the government decided to use chemical weapons to kill off most of the population, and almost all of those who survived the attack turned into psychopaths who are out for blood 24/7. Thus, the trip is obviously a stupid idea, and the film knows it. However, since there wouldn't be a "story" without the trip, we are told that Mark is only doing it to save his marriage with Nina. Off the bat, this comes off as really stupid reasoning, but the aforementioned attention to detail and the chemistry between Tyler Hoechlin and Kate Bosworth does a fairly good job of convincing me of their love.
The film itself plays like a clip show, often presenting an idea in action that lasts a few minutes before moving on to the next thing. While this is actually pretty effective for worldbuilding (and surprisingly, character development), it really takes a toll on the actual story. Another downside to this is often it feels like the film thinks it's presenting this fresh, groundbreaking, thought-provoking idea, when really it's just retreading territory that other stories have covered far better in the past. I've seen people comparing this to "The Purge" and "Mad Max" because of some of the themes and the aesthetic, but I'd be quicker to compare this to the "Fallout" game franchise and "The Walking Dead" for all of the ideas it takes from those two franchises.
There is some originality here, although I'm not entirely sure it was intended. For one, the film plays like a comedy. What I mean by that is any time the film has an opportunity to go for a laugh, it always goes for it. I think I laughed more watching this than I did when I saw "Tag", and that tells me that at least some of the humor I laughed at was intentional. However, I didn't expect to be watching a comedy, I was expecting a tense horror/thriller. It is disappointing to go into a horror film and not be scared (although there were two short-yet-notable moments that made me genuinely uncomfortable), but the laughs were certainly welcome in their absence.
Overall, the film is very competent, but nothing special. The editing is fine, the soundtrack is fine, the acting is pretty decent, the direction is there, and the cinematography is actually more than just basic camerawork. It is an hour-and-a-half odyssey that is not very scary, but packs in some good laughs. You rarely ever feel like you know what exactly is going to happen next, but you're not really invested enough to care either. Despite it's numerous faults and shortcomings, I found the film so enjoyable that I did not regret purchasing a ticket to watch it, and that is always a good sign that a film isn't too awful. Still, "The Domestics" fails to be any better than mediocre and inoffensive, which makes it quite middling for me.
So, should you watch this? If you want to watch an awkward-humor comedy set in a post-apocalyptic America (and I'm pretty sure it's just America, the rest of the world is probably fine), it certainly is a good popcorn film for that. If you're looking for something that makes you feel tense, scared, and uncomfortable throughout? well, Hereditary is still in theaters right now, go watch that instead.
Strong 5/10.
- How long is The Domestics?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $9,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $59,766
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.40:1