Omega Diary (1999) Poster

(1999)

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4/10
Does Nicely With Scant Resorces.
rsoonsa12 April 2005
Benjamin Cooper, the director of this psychological suspense film, also wrote and produced it and was generally behind the camera, additionally crafting its sets in his garage, completing the feature for a remarkable $5300, a trifling sum to be sure, even for a work shot with video tape, and although the piece is consequently somewhat raggedly done, some of that is due to distributor sound distortion for its VHS product. Four friends have taken a motor trip from Colorado to California's Pacific Coast as a vacation and, while frolicking upon a beach shortly after their arrival, they hear a radio news broadcast that tells of a full nuclear "exchange" between Russia and the United States with California being one target. Fortunately for the stunned travellers, a figure of salvation appears, a young man who proffers use of his late grandfather's nearby bomb shelter and the quintet, accompanied by a woman met at the beach, speed to the shelter, reaching it immediately prior to a ground rocking explosion. Two small rooms that comprise the shelter become the setting for a largely character focused drama, tension mounting due to cramped conditions, an aura of hopelessness, and Cooper's agile cinematography, with the six characters displaying their true selves, conflicts among the group becoming nearly unendurable, finally resolving themselves by acts of passionate violence. A large truck might be driven through holes in the plot and there is no danger of overmuch artistic success for this film that is made in southern California's San Luis Obispo County; however, it is Cooper's first effort at the helm and he must be proud of it as it is something special (for the money expended) and that will certainly be more evident when it is released in DVD format; each of the players works with enthusiasm, acting honours going to Catherine Barlow as the sole female of the cloistered assemblage.
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A look at human behavior
Moondrop_C9 August 2001
What happens when a half dozen people who don't know each other find themselves locked in a bomb shelter? They've just met at the beach when they hear, over the radio that World War III has started. One of them knows of a bomb shelter nearby where they all go and hole up. From then on it becomes a psychological study as paranoia and cabin fever set in. They begin to take sides and turn on each other and very bad things happen. This movie features actors I've never seen before (a couple of them overact a bit at times), one two-room set (once they enter the bomb shelter), and a twist at the end. I'm a sucker for end-of-the-world flicks so I had to watch this one when I saw it at the video store. It was pretty good. If you saw "Cube" and liked it, you'll probably enjoy this movie.
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