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Unrest Poster

Unrest

The First Film To Use Real Bodies
2006 | 88m | English

(8457 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: Jason Todd Ipson
Writer: Chris Billett
Staring:
Details

A young pathology med student suspects that the spirit of a dead cadaver in the hospital morgue where she works is killing off all those who handle or desecrate the body.
Release Date: Nov 11, 2006
Director: Jason Todd Ipson
Writer: Chris Billett
Genres: Horror, Mystery
Keywords prostitute, autopsy, murder of prostitute, medical examiner, pathology, hospital, cadaver, medical student, cremation, brazil
Production Companies Asgaard Entertainment, YMIR Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $2,500,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Corri English Alison Blanchard
Scot Davis Brian Cross
Joshua Alba Carlos Aclar
Jay Jablonski Rick O'Connor
Marisa Petroro Alita Covas
Ben Livingston Ivan Verbukh
Abner Genece Malcolm Little
Reb Fleming Dr. Saltz
Anna Johnson Jennifer
Derrick O'Connor Dr. Blackwell
J.C. Cunningham Medical Records
Terence Goodman Officer
Rhett Willman Security
Name Job
Michael Fimognari Director of Photography
Mario DeAngelis Still Photographer
Alex Boynton Production Design, Art Direction
Madla Hruza Costume Design, Production Design
Jacob A. Jessop Set Decoration
Jason Todd Ipson Director
Frederick Wedler Line Producer
Mike Saenz Editor
Michael Cohen Original Music Composer
Rick Curtis Art Direction
Bill Rude Title Designer
Amy Jean Roberts Wardrobe Supervisor
Kelly Klindt Dolly Grip
Wayne Wulfenstein Second Unit Director of Photography, Gaffer
Natalie Pascual Set Costumer
Jonathan Sizemore Electrician
James Troost Gaffer
Shaun 'Pickle' Davis Construction Coordinator
Matthew Ardine Electrician
Chris Luck Electrician
Jivan Tahmizian Dialogue Editor
Brent Sjodin Set Costumer
Kevin Duggin Electrician
Susan Pusateri Foley
Cassidy Latham Property Master
Valentina Ciacci Key Hair Stylist, Key Makeup Artist
Aron Dumas Property Master
Thomas D. Watson Key Grip
Kristin Ludwin Script Supervisor
Nehemias Colindres Electrician
Hiep Deiudonné Makeup Artist
Chris Billett Writer
Lisa Hamil Casting Director
Audra Rodgers Unit Production Manager
David F. Van Slyke Supervising Sound Editor, Sound Designer
Name Title
James Huntsman Executive Producer
Benson Yee Executive Producer
Gary Chun Executive Producer
Julio Bove Producer
Adam M. Lebovitz Producer
Jaime Burke Associate Producer
Randy Weiss Associate Producer
Phuong Tran Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 12 21 7
2024 5 15 29 8
2024 6 15 24 9
2024 7 18 44 8
2024 8 19 29 9
2024 9 10 19 6
2024 10 10 14 5
2024 11 11 19 5
2024 12 10 18 6
2025 1 10 16 5
2025 2 11 25 3
2025 3 6 18 1
2025 4 1 3 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 1 1 0
2025 9 1 1 0
2025 10 1 1 1

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

I think there's something wrong with my corpse. Could it be that the spirit of a dead cadaver is killing off all those who have medical dealings with her body? Judging by the unfairly low rating it has on the main internet movie sites, it's very likely that the slow pace and lack of gore has c ... ounted against Unrest, which is a big shame. Jason Todd Ipson (director) draws on his real life experiences as a Boston general surgery employee to produce a film of skin itching substance. The premise is nifty and the real location shooting really adds weight to this mortality gone awry tinged horror. There's a freshness to the film that leaps out, finding a film maker not merely content to pander to the formulaic hordes to win plaudits. Having an impossibly gorgeous female lead (Corri English) as the main protagonist would lend one to think that is not the case, but there's a rawness to English's acting that suits the character perfectly. There's a splendid realism factor to the picture, the blend of the real and the smart effects work nestling nicely together on the mortuary slab. Atmosphere is a word that has always been key in non blood letting horror parlance, and Unrest has it in abundance. It would have been easy for Ipson to rely on boo-jump shocks, but he doesn't, he uses his knowledge of setting and subject matter to craft a tight and tense thriller that manages to gnaw away at the senses, even ensuring that the cadaver, as dead as she apparently is, is a full and rich character holding court as the body count starts to tot up. The musical score (Michael Cohen) is a bit intrusive at times, a romantic sub-plot a little pointless, while the finale doesn't quite hit great heights given what has led up to it, but this is a smart dark mood accentuated piece and it is well worth checking out. 7.5/10

May 16, 2024