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Trench 11
In the final days of WWI a shell-shocked soldier must lead a mission deep beneath the trenches to stop a German plot that could turn the tide of the war.
3 August 1982, Friesach, Carinthia, Austria
14 March 1980, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
25 September 1978, Vancouver, Canada
12 June 1987, California, USA
24 February 1974, Winnipeg, Canada
1962, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
January 24, 2018
Packed with gore and atmosphere, it suffers from pacing issues and an out-of-place score.August 28, 2018
Trench 11 does not disappoint. The crew's decent into virtually the unknown will keep you in suspense. Scherman and team create a believable war-horror film.May 15, 2018
A decent instalment of a recurrent subgenre, Trench 11 manages to be several films at once, each complementing the other in their amalgamation into a singularly realised tale of dread and terror.August 30, 2018
It's not smart enough to work as a thoughtful historical thriller, and there's a lack of intensity that would doom most other horror films instantly.November 30, 2017
Smartly, director Leo Scherman never goes for laughs in this sepia-toned period piece, instead creating a sense of 78-feet-below-ground claustrophobia that finds middle ground between The Thing and The Descent.August 05, 2018
What Scherman achieves is a bigger picture of World War I and the toll it takes on soldiers, all from underground with only a few individuals.August 30, 2018
We're not talking enduring classic or anything, but as these things go it's pretty entertaining.September 04, 2018
If there is one reason to recommend Trench 11 it is the glorious, gooey practical effects.August 29, 2018
It's a zombie film, it's a WWI film, it's a science-run-amok film. But mostly it's a claustrophobic thriller about Allied soldiers fleeing a bunker with the ravenous infected below and kill-happy Germans above - 90 gripping minutes of literal escapism.