 I want to tell you briefly about this film that I saw a few days ago called It Comes at Night. I was able to sit in on a preview showing of it. It's a horror movie. I'm usually not interested in horror movies. I'm not interested in gore. I'm not interested in jump scares, which is what horror movies seem to be about these days. This was different. There's not much I can do as far as spoiling it, because there's not really much to spoil. It's a very simple film. It's more of an atmosphere piece. One of the images that's being used to promote the film is this one here that I'm putting on screen right now. This image gives you the wrong impression of the film. This makes you think that this is a zombie film, and I think that's probably deliberate, but this is not a zombie film, not at all. It is a plague film. There's obviously some sort of plague that has happened. We don't know what exactly has happened. The people in the film don't know either. It has a very small cast, very tiny. It's just a very small group of people who have survived in the woods outside the city. They're struggling to maintain some kind of life, some kind of order. The film is ruthless in its approach of showing the loneliness, the desperation, the agony of struggling day to day to survive when you pretty much know that you're not going to. The reviews are calling this film desperate and depressing, and it is. It is really a hard, uncompromising look at human nature, at the depths of human distrust, and the things that people are capable of when they're desperate, when they're hopeless, when they honestly don't know what to do. This is an excellent, excellent film, as dark and depressing as it is. It is an excellent film. It is an excellent example of film making. I've said that in my reviews before. There's a difference between pooping out just another Hollywood movie and film making. Visuals play an important part in this film. Sound plays a very important part of creating atmosphere, creating mood, creating tension and terror. All the way through the film, I was wondering, what does the title refer to? It comes at night. That implies that there's something supernatural, and at the end of the film, I was left wondering, still wondering, what did the title refer to? And I believe that it was deliberately left up to me and to the other audience members to figure out for yourself, what did I just see? What did we just see? What was the filmmaker trying to tell us? What did the title refer to? I think the best kind of film making leaves those kind of questions open. What films can I compare it to? Not Walking Dead, not Walking Dead. I've seen people comparing it to Walking Dead. I would say that's the wrong thing to compare it to. Children of Men is what I would compare it to. In fact, I think it was better than Children of Men. If you've not seen Children of Men, by the way, you should. So again, this definitely does not fall into the category of zombie film. And it doesn't even really fall into the category of post-apocalypse film, even though technically you could put it there. Whatever the case, I strongly recommend the film. I recommend that you see it in the theater before it's gone. So yeah, go do that. I'll see you next review. Please remember to press that like button. It helps my videos get seen. And then subscribe so you can come back next time. I do science fiction book, TV, and movie reviews all the time. And please consider becoming a patron. There's a link in the description below.