Three different video/DVD covers for The Dark – the centre picture is on the cover of the DVD version
that I own (© Craig Pryce/Lightshow Communications – reproduced
here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
Readers of ShukerNature may not all know
that in July 2020 I launched a new blog, Shuker In MovieLand (SIML), in which I review all
manner of movies (and occasionally TV shows) that I've previously watched. They
include a wide range of genres, from sci-fi, fantasy, super-heroes, and
animation, to musicals, comedy, historical drama, crime fiction, and much more
besides. Needless to say, however, as a cryptozoologist I have a particular
preference for monster movies, and have already reviewed on SIML several films that
contain a cryptozoology theme. Most of these are well known movies, but, intriguingly,
the review of mine on SIML that currently boasts more hits than any other is of
a very obscure, little-known monster movie, variously entitled The Dark, The Relic, and The God Rat.
As I feel sure that it will be of
interest to ShukerNature readers too, I am reproducing my review of this movie
here, and I earnestly suggest that you seek out the movie itself and watch it,
because it makes very entertaining viewing. So, without further ado, here is my
review of The Dark, whose original,
shorter version I posted on my Facebook timeline on 30 November 2019.
Last night [29 November 2019] I watched a
long-anticipated cryptozoology-themed movie, The Dark (aka The Relic
aka The God Rat – see later),
originally released in Italy in 1993. Directed by Craig Pryce, it stars Stephen
McHattie as a leather-jacketed, motorbike-riding cryptozoologist (sounds familiar??)
named Gary 'Hunter' Henderson. He is seeking a mysterious,
scientifically-undescribed subterranean beast akin to a giant carnivorous
rodent that excavates huge tunnels underneath a graveyard, feeds upon
recently-interred corpses, and secretes a slimy substance that has miraculous,
swift-acting healing properties. Filmed in Canada, this unusual movie also
stars Neve Campbell, making her big-screen debut, as Hunter's girlfriend Jesse
Donovan.
The monster is only seen in brief
glimpses, and then only its toothy long-jawed head and long-clawed forepaws for
the most part. The plot is fairly pedestrian - a good cryptozoologist seeking
to study and preserve the creature for its taxonomic significance as an
apparent prehistoric survivor and also for its slime's potentially immense
medicinal benefits versus a bad vengeful ex-cop relentlessly seeking to slay it
in revenge for its self-defence killing of his police partner when he was still
on the force.
Stephen
McHattie as Gary 'Hunter' Henderson in The
Dark (© Craig Pryce/Lightshow Communications – reproduced
here on a strictly non-commercial Fair Use basis for educational/review
purposes only)
However, what has always intrigued me
about this movie, which had particularly spurred me on for so long to seek it
out on DVD (no easy matter!) and view it, was that its cryptid subject is more
than a little reminiscent of a bona fide mystery beast. Reported from Scotland,
this latter cryptid is known as the earth hound, and is indeed said to frequent
graveyards and devour buried corpses. My book Mysteries of Planet Earth (1999)
was the first crypto-book to investigate and document the earth hound, but if
you click here
you can access a ShukerNature blog article of mine concerning this fascinating
mystery beast.
The DVD of The Dark that I own actually has a German-language cover (see
centre picture in the trio of photographs opening this present blog post), on
which this movie is entitled The Relic
(in English) and The God Rat (in German), but the movie that
plays on the DVD disc itself is the original English version and is entitled in
its opening credits as The Dark.
Incidentally, this present movie should
not be confused – but often is – with another cryptozoology-themed film also
entitled The Relic. Directed by Peter
Hyams and originally released in 1997, its very different plot concerns a
monstrous entity inadvertently transported back to the USA from South America,
which duly runs amok in Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History. I have this
movie on DVD too, but haven't watched it yet – be sure that once I do, however,
I shall be duly reviewing on Shuker In MovieLand!
Last, but by no means least, The Dark is currently available (as of today,
10 September 2020, anyway) to watch in its entirety free of charge on YouTube
(click here to do so). Consequently,
if you're a fan of monster movies with a cryptozoology theme like I am, I
strongly recommend that you make the most of this golden opportunity to watch
this otherwise difficult-to-find movie while you can, in case it is
subsequently deleted from YT.
Reconstruction
of the likely appearance in life of the mysterious earth hound as based upon alleged
eyewitness descriptions (© William M. Rebsamen)
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