She Never Died is a 2019 Canadian horror comedy film directed by Audrey Cummings and written by Jason Krawczyk. The movie is seen by critics as a follow-up sister-sequel to Krawczyk's 2015 movie He Never Died, which starred Henry Rollins, although the creator and director of the first film Krawcyzk has stated it is a remake. It is set within the same universe.[1] Krawczyk had initially intended the 2015 film to be expanded into a miniseries and follow-up film, but repurposed the script into She Never Died after the endeavor was cancelled.[2]

She Never Died
Directed byAudrey Cummings
Screenplay byJason Krawczyk
Produced by
  • Zach Hagen
  • Bill Marks
  • Jennifer Mesich
Starring
CinematographyIan Macmillan
Edited byMichael P. Mason
Music byJim McGrath
Production
companies
A71 Productions
Alternate Ending Studios
Release dates
  • 19 September 2019 (2019-09-19) (Cinéfest)
  • 14 April 2020 (2020-04-14)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

This iteration stars Oluniké Adeliyi in a role similar to Rollins' character Jack, playing a mysterious recluse with a hunger for human flesh and a talent for violence. Noah Dalton Danby and Michelle Nolden play the film's main antagonists, while Peter MacNeill and Kiana Madeira star as a grizzled detective and innocent bystander.

The film premiered at the Cinéfest Sudbury International Film Festival on 19 September 2019.[3]

Plot

edit

The film opens to a city plagued by human-trafficking, where an inhumanly strong Lacey enters to foil a late-night abduction, devouring the attacker in a flood of screams and allowing the victim to flee.

A tired and aging Detective Godfrey leaves the police station to continue his one-man investigation of a comfortably sinister character (Terrance), whom he suspects to be in charge of a trafficking operation. He takes up a surveillance post in an abandoned warehouse district where a disheveled Lacey has also been waiting for the suspect to arrive. With apparent disregard for the detective's presence, she forces entrance into the compound. Inside, a young man is being forced into a game of Russian roulette between himself and a chained dog for the entertainment of a live-streamed audience. Lacey interrupts to kill the man and savagely remove his eyes for a snack, apparently unaffected by a gunshot to the head. The man behind the camera flees to find his boss, Terrance, engaged in his own game of torture. Both returning to the scene, they find the body dismembered and the incident recorded; meanwhile, Lacey leaves frustrated, ignoring Godfrey as he enters to discover what has happened.

Similar to He Never Died, the antisocial Lacey finds refuge in a boring diner, seeking only oatmeal and tea. With Godfrey at home in disbelief, Terrance seeks to verify his own disbelief by showing the footage to his boss and sibling, Meredith. The pair, comically comfortable in their criminal enterprise, plot to capture Lacey in order to profit off of her abilities. The next day, Godfrey returns to find Lacey and the two decide to talk at the diner. Lacey is forthcoming about her cannibalistic needs that she claims to satisfy only by eating evil people – in this case, Terrance. Godfrey realises Lacey is his only hope in exacting retribution so he offers her up targets in exchange for a place to stay. Lacey promptly finds and kills two of these targets in a suspicious apartment and, after conferring with Godfrey, she returns to release their detainee, Suzzie. Though initially afraid, Suzzie follows Lacey to the diner, in awe of her abilities. The bubbly Suzzie is intent on staying with Lacey and becoming her friend, while Lacey struggles to resist the voices compelling her to kill Suzzie.

Godfrey heads off to investigate the apartment where Terrance finds and captures him, winding up strapped to a chair in the company of Meredith. After a casual conversation, she then leaves Terrance to interrogate Godfrey for Lacey's whereabouts. Terrance and a crony then track down Lacey, who is indifferent to being beaten and captured, taking her back to their compound to be heavily restrained. Suzzie, who has witnessed Lacey's abduction, seeks Godfrey's help at the police station, where only the desk sergeant is concerned enough to help; all the while, the criminal siblings are beginning to experiment on Lacey for their amusement. A concerned and reckless Suzzie finds a way into the compound, passing through a party for the rich and powerful before finding and freeing Godfrey. Together they attempt to rescue an impaled Lacey who erupts into a rage of power to decapitate Terrance and wreak havoc on the party, a rampage that concludes with Meredith being thrown off the rooftop to her death.

Much later, a retired Godfrey runs into Lacey at the laundromat. During a friendly farewell, they exchange first names, revealing Lacey to really be Lilith. After Godfrey leaves, the haunting "man in the hat" finally appears clearly to Lacey, so she addresses her frustration about immortality to him, assuming him to be God. The film ends foreboding an apocalypse, as revealed to Godfrey at home by yet another bulletproof character.

The ending shot is of four motorcycle license plates that reference the Book of Revelation and the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. This was alluded to at the beginning by the "pantless" man in the cell that speaks to Godfrey.

Cast

edit

Reception

edit

Critical response

edit

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 100% of 13 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.5/10.[4]. Ian Sedensky of Culture Crypt gave the film an 80/100, summarising it as "...an updated, unusual experience in abnormality whose mundane moments are punctuated by sparks of savage horror and slow strokes of deadpan humour."[5]

Awards

edit
Year Ceremony Category Nominee Result
2019
Another Hole in the Head Genre Film Festival Audience Award Audrey Cummings Won
Blood in the Snow Canadian Film Festival Best Actress Oluniké Adeliyi Won
Vanguard Award Audrey Cummings Won
New York City Horror Film Festival Best Director Won
Nightmares Film Festival Best Thriller Feature Nominated
Best Cinematography Feature Ian Macmillan Nominated
Best Actress Feature Oluniké Adeliyi Nominated

References

edit
  1. ^ "Chris Knight: She Never Died is a 'sister sequel' that stands up nicely on its own". National Post. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
  2. ^ Hermanns, Grant. "Exclusive: Henry Rollins Reflects on He Never Died & Repurposed Sequel". Coming Soon. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  3. ^ Krawczyk, Mark (September 16, 2019). ""She Never Died" is A Brutal, Bold and Bloody Female-Led Sequel". weliveentertainment.com.
  4. ^ "She Never Died". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved October 14, 2023.  
  5. ^ Sedensky, Ian. "She Never Died (2019)". Culture Crypt. Retrieved 28 October 2020.