Zombies, a killer chimp and… water polo? ‘The Plague,’ ‘Primate,’ ‘We Bury the Dead’ – 828reviewsNOW
Read our reviews of a trio of horror flicks: "The Plague," Charlie Polinger's body horror flick about bullying at a water polo camp, "Primate," Johannes Roberts' chimpanzee slasher and "We Bury the Dead," a thoughtful zombie movie starring "Star Wars" alum Daisy Ridley.
ContributedParamount PicturesMiguel Torres Umba plays Ben, a killer chimpanzee, in "Primate."
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW) — When it comes to new movies, January is better known as “Dump-uary.” Typically, the first month of the year is a wasteland for moviegoers yearning for big blockbusters or prestige awards fare. The good thing is, that invariably means there will be room on the marquee for a few smaller movies to sneak onto the big screen.
This year, the Dumpuary gems are a trio of horror flicks: “The Plague,” Charlie Polinger’s body horror movie about bullying at a water polo camp, “Primate,” Johannes Roberts’ gory chimpanzee slasher and “We Bury the Dead,” a thoughtful zombie movie starring “Star Wars” alum Daisy Ridley. Read our reviews below.
“THE PLAGUE” (2025, 95 min., directed by Charlie Polinger)
(Courtesy: Independent Film Company) “The Plague” sets its tale of terror at a water polo camp.
I love horror movies. From the gnarliest gore to the most atmospheric slow-burners, I love ’em all, and at this point, it takes a lot to rattle me. “The Plague” is the exception. It might be the scariest movie I’ve ever seen.
“The Plague” is somehow Charlie Polinger’s debut feature, but the director clearly knows what he’s doing. “The Plague” follows an awkward 13-year-old kid navigating bullying at a water polo summer camp, and combines hair-raising sound design, sick body horror and a confident handle on prepubescent cruelty to create an absolute nightmare of an hour-and-a-half.
Watching “The Plague” feels like drowning. I recommend checking it out with headphones in, if possible. The film is scored to a discomfiting chorus of moans and rapid breathing, which would be eerie enough, but its oneiric underwater sequences had a way of submerging the sound that made me feel like I was suffocating. “The Plague” is tense, claustrophobic and inescapable, which is, in fact, exactly what a bad week at summer camp is when you’re 13.
The movie stars Everett Blunck, who does great work as the protagonist of the piece, but it is the smarmy, satanically cherubic Kayo Martin who steals the show. Though set in the early aughts, Martin’s bully feels wholly modern, sharing a lot of common DNA with last year’s “Adolescence” in its examination of toxic, shameless youth. There just happens to be a little more water polo and a couple more oozing rashes in this take on the subject matter.
Rating: 4/5
“PRIMATE” (2025, 89 min., directed by Johannes Roberts)
(Courtesy: Paramount Pictures) Benjamin Cheng, Victoria Wyant, Jessica Alexander, Johnny Sequoyah and Miguel Torres Umba as “Ben” in “Primate.”
In the first five minutes of “Primate,” a guy gets his face ripped off by a rapid chimpanzee. If that doesn’t sound like your thing, the rest of “Primate” is probably not for you. However, if that tease makes you froth at the mouth like said rabid chimp, you are in for a chimpan-treat.
“Primate” is a lean, mean slasher about Ben, a beloved pet turned sadistic killer via a bite from a rabid mongoose. The bulk of the movie follows Ben terrorizing a group of 20-somethings vacationing in Hawaii. While some modern slashers would make an effort to flesh out those characters before turning them into piles of monkey-bitten goo, “Primate” is refreshingly retro, eschewing dramatic arcs and complex narratives for quick, nasty kills.
The closest thing to real characters in the film are the protagonist, Lucy, played by relative newcomer Johnny Sequoyah, and her father, Adam, played by Academy Award-winning Deaf actor Troy Kotsur. American Sign Language plays a major role in “Primate,” serving a practical purpose for the characters, who are able to communicate in chimp-proof silence, and showcasing Deaf culture as an organic part of American life, which is always an appreciated mission, even in a gory monkey movie.
Trust me: It cannot be overstated how violent “Primate” is. The film is unsparingly gross, and more than a little tonally unbalanced. Are we supposed to laugh at the kills, or is the characters’ situation supposed to be totally distressing? “Primate” isn’t sure.
Nonetheless, for the first two weeks of 2026, “Primate” makes a strong bid for best movie of the year.
So far.
Probably not by December. That would be bananas.
Rating: 3.5/5
“WE BURY THE DEAD” (2024, 95 min., directed by Zak Hilditch)
(Courtesy: Vertical) Daisy Ridley in “We Bury the Dead.”
Daisy Ridley has had an interesting career. The actor had her breakout in 2015, when she starred as Rey, the Jedi heroine of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” After that tremendously high profile trilogy, Ridley has spent the last half decade in relative obscurity, making one or two small films a year. However, the movies she has chosen to make are predominantly pretty cool thrillers, “We Bury the Dead” included.
I want to shout out “The Marsh King’s Daughter,” which came out in 2023, made $3 million at the worldwide box office and then sank into the marshes of anonymous streaming tripe. It’s fun!
“We Bury the Dead” is significantly less fun, but it is a thoughtful, meditative take on the zombie movie, and handsomely shot, too. Ridley stars as a woman attempting to find her husband after the United States accidentally blows up the Eastern coast of Tasmania, an explosion which inadvertently creates a bunch of zombies, whose primary undead characteristic is a newfound love for grinding their teeth. Teeth-grinding is a scary noise, and filmmaker Zak Hilditch knows it.
The film, set months after the explosion, follows Ridley’s character, Ava, working on a body retrieval detail for the Australian government. But, as the zombies wake up, old memories resurface for Ava, and “We Bury the Dead” toggles between a good old fashioned Aussie road movie and a frustratingly stale metaphor for crumbling marriage. At least it has ideas, which is an indicator of more brains than most zombie flicks boast. The closest comp to “We Bury the Dead,” in fact, is the fantastic “28 Years Later,” the sequel to which, unluckily for its competition here, comes out this weekend.
The first new “Star Wars” movie in seven years is here! While far, far away from the galaxy’s best “Star Wars” flick, “The Mandalorian and Grogu” offers up cuteness in overdrive.
A Michael Jackson biopic, two Anne Hathaway vehicles and an Australian serial killer thriller are our movies to see, stream or skip this May. Find out which is which in our reviews.
Looking for a movie to see in Asheville this April? Learn what to see, stream or skip with our reviews of a cult horror reboot, a fresh spin on “Hamlet,” a documentary of epic length and a niche new vampire flick.
Check out our review of the not-so super “Super Mario Bros.” sequel and dive into our spoiler-free overview of the first eight episodes of “Star Wars: Maul – Shadow Lord,” now streaming on Disney+.
In the latest case of ironic movie calendar confluence, two bloody movies about a pair of sisters battling satanic death cults were released inside a week of each other. Despite the oddly specific similarities of their premises, one is far more successful than the other.
Ryan Gosling may be the most charming astronaut who has ever befriended a rocky alien spider-crab in the fun and fantastic-looking “Project Hail Mary.” Read our review for more.
“Dolly,” a new horror film evoking slashers like “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” and filmed in Chattanooga, Tennessee, does Appalachian horror with gory panache. Read more in our review.
The 98th Academy Awards are almost here. Before Hollywood’s biggest night commences, take a look at our predictions for what will win and what should win Oscar gold. Plus, print out a ballot to play alongside our predictions.
A Pixar movie about beavers, humans and the bonds between them. A scathing documentary about the Alabama prison system. The latest installment in a long-running horror franchise. Which should you see, stream or skip? Find out in our review.
“André Is an Idiot” is a funny, inventive documentary about the necessity of colonoscopies and the life and death of the creative, eccentric André Ricciardi. Read our interview with the filmmakers.
In advance of the 98th Academy Awards next month, take a deeper look at three lesser-seen films up for Oscar gold: “Cutting Through Rocks,” a hopeful feminist documentary, “Kokuho,” an epic Japanese drama, and “Sirāt,” a weird, hypnotic road movie.
Sometimes, the film release calendar feels like it’s winking at you. This weekend marks the debut of “How to Make a Killing,” a stylish thriller-comedy starring Glen Powell, and “Psycho Killer,” a well-shot, poorly-written serial killer slasher. Read our reviews of the deadly duo for more.
Jacob Elordi and Margot Robbie are the stars of “”Wuthering Heights”,” a romantic reimagining of the classic Emily Brontë novel by “Saltburn” director Emerald Fennell. Like a bad kiss, the film is dissatisfying and a little gross. Happy Valentine’s Day.
This February, we review a zany new sci-fi adventure from the director of “Pirates of the Caribbean,” an Oscar-nominated documentary about senior opera singers and the concluding installment of a horror movie trilogy. Which should you see, stream or skip? Find out in our review.
We wouldn’t say that “Whistle” blows, but it definitely doesn’t sing. Corin Hardy’s horror flick is a love song to its genre, but too much of a clunky retread of other “death curse” flicks to feel fresh. Read more in our review.
“Send Help” stars Rachel McAdams and Dylan O’Brien as workplace rivals stuck on a paradisiacal island turned deadly hunting ground. After 17 years away from the the genre, “Evil Dead” director Sam Raimi has returned to his roots with a fantastically campy piece of horror filmmaking. Read our review now.
Following Danny Boyle and Alex Garland’s return to the “28 Days Later” franchise last summer, director Nia DaCosta brings her own gruesome, meditative take to the zombie series with “28 Years Later: The Bone Temple.” Read our review for more.
The nominees for the 98th Academy Awards were presented Thursday morning by Danielle Brooks and Warren Wilson College alum Lewis Pullman, kicking off the race to Oscar gold this March. Read our breakdown of the surprises and snubs from the announcement.
Read our reviews of a trio of horror flicks: “The Plague,” Charlie Polinger’s body horror flick about bullying at a water polo camp, “Primate,” Johannes Roberts’ chimpanzee slasher and “We Bury the Dead,” a thoughtful zombie movie starring “Star Wars” alum Daisy Ridley.
The first big romantic comedy of 2026 has arrived. “People We Meet on Vacation,” adapted from the bestselling novel of the same name by Emily Henry and starring Emily Bader and Tom Blyth, will begin streaming on Netflix on Friday, Jan. 9. Read our review.
Two Amanda Seyfried movies and a true crime documentary are in the mix for new movies to see, stream or skip this month. Which is which? Find out in our review.
There is something irresistible about Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline,” especially as performed by Kate Hudson and Hugh Jackman. “Song Sung Blue” understands this very well. Read our full review of the musical melodrama below.
2025 was a fantastic year for global cinema. From searing docudramas to surreal celebrations of the film medium itself, we visit Brazil, China, Iran, Norway and Palestine to bring you the best international movies of 2025. Read our list.
When “Avatar: The Way of Water” was released in 2022, it had been 13 years since James Cameron’s revolutionary sci-fi epic first hit the scene. “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” meanwhile, comes soaring into cinemas this weekend just three years after its predecessor, and this time, it feels a little less special. Read our full review.
As the year winds to a close, 828reviewsNOW takes a look at the best movies of 2025. First things first: from gory sci-fi spectacles to French-language indies, we draw up a list of the year’s best animated features.
The end of the year is almost here, but there are still movies coming out left and right. From animated sequels to Christmas comedies to Netflix dramas, here are five new movies to see, stream or skip this December.
Christmas isn’t here yet, but a new “Knives Out” movie sure feels like a gift. The latest, “Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery,” is another exemplary whodunnit from Rian Johnson and Daniel Craig. Read our review now.