
Send Help 4 stars
If you’ve ever seen a Sam Raimi directed horror movie you know you are in for plenty of comic violence, bloody gore and perhaps a moral message as well. And it’s certainly going to be fun. In Send Help you get all that and more from the Director of The Evil Dead movies and Drag Me to Hell and Executive Producer of Hercules and Xena: Warrior Princess. When I saw the preview, I knew I had to see this one. In the headquarters of a nameless corporation, Linda Liddle (Rachel McAdams in a role unlike any of her earlier ones) has been faithfully working in the Strategy and Planning Department for seven years and has been promised a position as vice president by the president if she sticks with it. She is very smart and well read at survival techniques (being a big fan of the TV show Survivor) but not well liked by her co-workers. Bradley (Dylan O’Brian) arrives as the new president after the sudden death of his father, the previously mentioned company president. Bradley doesn’t appreciate Linda’s disheveled looks and openly mocks her. He then promotes his fraternity brother, who has been there only six months to the coveted vice president position leaving poor Linda in shock. Bradley can’t get rid of Linda because she is too valuable to the company. So, he takes her along on his private jet to an important meeting concerning the impending merger in Bangkok. But before the plane lands it encounters a terrible storm that causes the plane to crash somewhere in the Pacific Ocean. Linda survives the crash and finds herself on a deserted island. Before long though she finds Bradley has washed up on shore, unconscious and with an injured leg. She nurses him back to health and the two of them survive on coconuts, native fruits and fish. All that survival knowledge comes in handy, and she relishes this environment where she is the one in authority, but Bradley resents the circumstances where he has no valuable skills and must be subservient to Linda. Their stay on the island becomes a battle of wills with each eventually feigning a spirit of cooperation but also holding something back from the other. Along the way there is conflict growing between them, plenty of exaggerated gore (in Sam Raimi fashion), injuries (real and implied) and vomiting. McAdams really sinks her teeth into this role, gleefully relishing the circumstances she finds herself in. O’Brien is convincing as the obnoxious rich kid who has had everything handed to him, smirking at those who are less privileged. You really want to hate him. The dark comedy accelerates to a dramatic and violent conclusion that only Sam Raimi can pull off. I was laughing my head off. So go see the movie and have a great time for two hours.