While out hunting, Dan accidentally shoots another hunter. Rather than reporting the accident to the authorities, he chooses to bury the body and forget it ever happened. One year later, Dan returns to the same woods for a hunting trip with some friends. Their weekend starts out innocently enough, but while the guys are having fun, something is coming back to life in the woods--and it wants revenge.
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It's strange that some low or even no budget flicks get a good release. Gut Pile is a perfect example. It's clearly to see that indeed no budget was involved but what made it watchable was the way it was shot and edited by the director Jerry O'Sullivan.I liked it and just for one reason. It reminded me a lot of Within The Woods (1978), the short that spawned The Evil Dead (1981). So yes it's a kind of rip-off but only in the way Sam Raimi (the director of Within The Woods) made his shots. It works but still not that much gore is seen as in Raimi's classic.But by clocking in under 55 minutes it really never bored me. The acting was rather good. And the score use did add something to the scariness of this flick. Although it never frightened me it entertained me. Here and there a piece of soft gore and some blood here and there. If you liked Within The Woods then you will like this but if you can't stand no budget keep away from it because it looked as it was made in the eighties, no white balance, no grading afterwards...Gore 2/5 Nudity 0/5 Effects 1/5 Story 2/5 Comedy 0/5
Over the years, plenty of directors have been 'influenced' by low-budget horror classic The Evil Dead, but very few have tried to emulate that film as closely as Jerry O'Sullivan, whose uninspired 'evil spirit in the woods' flick Gut-Pile shamelessly 'borrows' every directorial trick in Sam Raimi's book, albeit with very little success.Made by the aptly named Shoestring Films and released by Sub Rosa, this crappy effort revolves around three guys spending a hunting weekend in a remote cabin who find themselves at the mercy of a vengeful spirit. Complete with Raimi's 360 degrees rotation shot, his steadicam through the trees gimmick, and a variety of other very familiar camera angles, sound production tricks and lighting effects, this piece of highly derivative nonsense would be completely and utterly worthless if it wasn't for a half-decent 'wall-mounted decapitated head trophy' gag, some cheap and cheerful flying severed limb action, an eviscerated corpse (his guts left in a pile on the ground, hence the title) and the appearance of a silly scarecrow monster towards the end.
OK, so it's not Spielberg but as straight to video "B" movies go its not that bad. I think the acting has room for improvement, but on the whole its pretty good. The other commenter pointed out the fake fire crackling sound "added" to the soundtrack. I beg to differ, I was there that night the sound is the real fire burning and is not augmented in any way.A small bit of trivia, the explosion was an accident and not intentional, but it was "caught on tape" and added to the movie. I believe a couple of us lost some eyebrow and I fell over a log and pierced the palm of my hand on a stump! Ed Mastin, Bob
One of the best popcorn horror movies I've seen in a long time, and easily one of the best homages to THE EVIL DEAD. Director Sullivan and producer/actor Ron Bonk deserve high praise for putting entertainment back into low-budget horror movies.