The Province

Fit for garbage day?

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com

For the better part of a decade, the first Friday in January has become known as the dumping ground for what is often the worst film of the year. They are often the third or fifth or 11th instalment in a tired horror franchise, and they are hardly ever screened in advance for critics. It’s as though the studios decide to start each year with a resolution to take out the trash.

Last year, the fifth of January brought Insidious: The Last Key, a.k.a. Insidious 4, directed by Adam Robitel (remember that name!) and scoring an ignominiou­s 32 per cent at rottentoma­toes. com. 2017 saw the Jan. 6 release of Underworld: Blood Wars, a.k.a. Underworld 5, starring a grumpy Kate Beckinsale. It rates 20 per cent at Rotten Tomatoes.

There was 2016’s The Forest, an original horror set in Japan’s Suicide Forest, with a deadly 10 per cent score. 2015 had The Woman in Black: Angel of Death (sequel), scoring 23 per cent. And so on through Paranormal Activity 5, Texas Chainsaw 7 and back to Nicolas Cage and Ron Perlman as medieval knights in Season of the Witch. Tomatomete­r: 10 per cent. Release date: Jan. 7, 2011.

Which brings us to Escape Room, directed by Robitel — remember that name? The plot involves six strangers who are invited to compete in escape rooms, only to discover that failure means death. It had a release date of Nov. 30, 2018, which was then moved to Feb. 1, 2019, and finally the dreaded Jan. 4.

The six-strangers concept calls to mind the Canadian cult sci-fi film Cube, while the trailer suggests something closer to Saw, albeit with a more corporate, less dungeon-y feel. But Escape Room wasn’t screened for the press ahead of its release. That, combined with the release date, suggests that perhaps the only people clamouring to get out of a torturous situation will be the public.

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