Tag Archives: survival horror

Bone Keeper (2026)

Starring Sarah Alexandra Marks, Louis James, John Rhys-Davies, Tiffany Hannam-Daniels, Tyler Winchcombe, Sophia Eleni, Danny Rahim, Angela Dixon, Sarah T. Cohen. Russell Shaw, Pat Garrett and Marco Antonio Clifton.
Written, directed and produced by Howard J. Ford.
Latitude Films

Something slimy this way comes...
Something slimy this way comes…
Human remains are scattered about the creatures' lair...
Human remains are scattered about the creatures’ lair…

Olivia Wheeler and a bunch of her friends, including Ethan, Nick and Annabelle, journey to a remote cave in the hope of finding out what happened to Olivia’s missing mother, Lucy. On the way there they pick up a blogger, Ashley, who becomes intrigued by the story and asks to tag along with them so that she can livestream the search. Despite the warnings of Professor Harisson, an academic with in-depth knowledge of the area, and the antisocial reception they receive from the locals, the group presses on, venturing into the depths of the cave system… where monstrosities await…

The friends pick up a blogger (Sarah T. Cohen), who joins them on their trip
The friends pick up a blogger (Sarah T. Cohen), who joins them on their trip
The group (played by Louis James, Tyler Winchcombe, Sophia Eleni, Danny Rahim, Sarah Alexandra Marks, Sarah T. Cohen and Tiffany Hannam-Daniels) head into the cave...
The group (played by Louis James, Tyler Winchcombe, Sophia Eleni, Danny Rahim, Sarah Alexandra Marks, Sarah T. Cohen and Tiffany Hannam-Daniels) head into the cave…

Howard J. Ford’s movie is tons of fun!

And I don’t think I’m getting into spoiler alert territory by revealing that the movie’s subterranean menace is revealed to be a swarm of ancient tentacled terrors from space, because Howard is happy to divulge the origins of the threat straight away, beginning his movie with a great shot of a meteorite scorching through the atmosphere and slamming into the earth. He follows this up with a scene, still set in prehistoric times, showing us a hapless caveman, who has made the mistake of deciding to dwell in a cavern close to the old meteor impact site, getting nabbed by tentacles! So, with viewers in the know and ready to enjoy the dramatic irony of watching the oblivious characters begin their exploration of the monster-infested cave, Howard delivers a series of sequences where the protagonists put themselves in mortal danger as they crawl through tunnels and split into different groups, ensuring the film becomes a full-on survival-horror-sci-fi flick from this point on.

The meteor that brings the slimy octo-thingies to Earth...
The meteor that brings the slimy octo-thingies to Earth…

But before all this happens, in the first act we do get to hang out with the characters for a while. They share lighthearted banter, Olivia’s determination to find out what happened to Lucy is highlighted, and they visit Professor Harisson, played with gusto by genre fave John Rhys-Davies, who advises them to keep away from the cave, but he doesn’t offer strong enough evidence to really deter them. There’s also a pleasing sequence in a pub populated by rude and aggressive regulars, where rumours are told of the strange happenings in the region near the mouth of the cave. This nicely steers the story momentarily into old-school horror film territory, riffing on the Hammer Films-style trope of provincials warning visitors of the legends linked to the locale.

Professor Harisson (John Rhys-Davies) attempts to dissuade the group of friends from exploring the cave system
Professor Harisson (played by John Rhys-Davies) attempts to dissuade the group of friends from exploring the cave system
Tattooed local Ruskin (Marco Antonio Clifton) is far from friendly when Olivia and her friends visit the nearby pub
Tattooed local Ruskin (Marco Antonio Clifton) is far from friendly when Olivia and her mates visit the nearby pub
Sophia Eleni, who plays Nadia in BONE KEEPER, finds something glistening on the cave wall...
Sophia Eleni, who plays Nadia in BONE KEEPER, finds something glistening on the cave wall…

For a modestly budgeted film, the digital visual effects by Giordano Aita and Rafael Emidio are very good, offering up lots of lovely, slimy shots of various octo-beasts crawling around the cave system they dwell in. These quasi-Lovecraftian things digest and absorb their human prey, so some of the creatures partly resemble their victims, whilst others are full-on octopoid monsters! Some of these light-hating critters have bodies of glistening, smooth flesh, but others possess spiky appendages. There are many scenes of tentacles snatching away screaming cavers, ensuring that I was really entertained with BONE KEEPER, and the enjoyment factor was boosted even higher thanks to Professor Harisson’s decision to call the authorities later in the story, setting the scene for a SWAT team vs monsters showdown! Woot!

Above: 2 shots from an early monster attack scene
Above: 2 shots from an early monster attack scene
A victim gets absorbed!
A victim gets absorbed!

After watching BONE KEEPER at a cast & crew screening, I started thinking about the vibrant indie genre film scene that has developed in the UK over the last decade or so, and I’d like to talk about it here for a moment…

Director Howard J. Ford talks to his audience just before the film is shown at the cast & crew screening in London
Director Howard J. Ford speaks to his audience just before the film is shown at the cast & crew screening in London in 2025
Cast member Tyler Winchcombe poses with a BONE KEEPER prop tentacle in a pub after the cast & crew screening!
Actor Tyler Winchcombe poses with a BONE KEEPER prop tentacle in a pub after the cast & crew screening!

BONE KEEPER director Howard J. Ford is a prolific independent filmmaker who has been a key part of the fruitful flourishing of lively British horror, thriller and sci-fi movies. His releases include the zombie opus THE DEAD (2010) and its follow-up THE DEAD 2: INDIA (2013), the action-survival-thriller THE LEDGE (2022), and the cyber-horror-thriller DARKGAME (2024). Howard’s movies (plus scores of other UK indie genre films made on small budgets from directors such as Sean Cronin) have helped create the environment wherein a captivating, enthusiastic group of thespians have arisen, pursuing their careers in these Imaginator-Magazine-friendly flicks, often appearing in many of the same films together. So, as a way of providing a snapshot of the current UK genre movie scene, let’s take a look at some of the actors appearing in BONE KEEPER…

Sarah Alexandra Marks is Olivia in BONE KEEPER
Sarah Alexandra Marks is Olivia in BONE KEEPER

Sarah Alexandra Marks plays Olivia, the Final Girl of this story who has the singleminded drive to go back into the cavern of horrors even after some of the group have succeeded in escaping from it. Before BONE KEEPER I’d already seen her in movies such as Howard’s RIVER OF BLOOD (2024), Sean Cronin’s BOGIEVILLE (2024), and also in WITCH (2024), where I thought she played her character in a very sincere and appealing manner, plus she’s been in MONSTER PORTAL (2022), MANOR OF DARKNESS (2025), and in a whole bunch of other genre flicks including SKY MONSTER (2023), Howard’s ESCAPE (2023), KINGDOM OF THE DINOSAURS (2022)… and many more!

Louis James is Ethan in BONE KEEPER
Louis James is Ethan in BONE KEEPER

Then there’s Louis James, who is Ethan in BONE KEEPER. He is Sarah’s husband in real life, and he’s very prolific too! I enjoyed watching him perform with Sarah in RIVER OF BLOOD, where he really impresses playing a flawed-yet-compelling protagonist. He has been in quite a few of the same movies as his wife (MANOR OF DARKNESS, BOGIEVILLE, ESCAPE, and shorts including 2023’s THE INVISIBLE WOMAN, etc), and he has also appeared in such productions as TALE OF THE FOREST UNICORN (2025), VIPERS (2024), and others. BONE KEEPER’s SWAT officer, Mathews, is played by Russell Shaw. I interviewed Russell in issue 8 of Imaginator, talking to him about the time-travelling wizard-dude he’d enjoyed playing in 2024’s WITCH, a film that, of course, also includes Sarah Alexandra Marks. There are so many career crossovers with these actors! Russell’s other genre credits include Howard’s ESCAPE (a film also starring Sarah Alexandra Marks), THE R.I.P MAN (2025), and Howard’s THE LOCKDOWN HAUNTINGS (2021), a film that includes a detective played by Angela Dixon, who is Olivia’s mum Lucy in BONE KEEPER. I’ve seen Angela play another mother character in the cracking London-set vampire film DRAINED (2024) and recently watched her as Doctor Carol Mills in the vampires-in-a-mobile-home-park film, BOGIEVILLE, which, of course, features Sarah Alexandra Marks and Louis James! Angela is quite a regular in Howard’s movies, notching up appearances in five of them, one of which (THE LOCKDOWN HAUNTINGS) she also wrote.

Tiffany Hannam-Daniels is Annabelle in BONE KEEPER
Tiffany Hannam-Daniels is Annabelle in BONE KEEPER

Tiffany Hannam-Daniels, who plays Annabelle in BONE KEEPER, has also appeared in Howard’s ESCAPE and RIVER OF BLOOD, whilst Tyler Winchcombe, playing Nick in BONE KEEPER, was also in ESCAPE, plus such genre films as BIKINI SHARK (2025) and the human-pig-hybrid B-horror flick PIGLET (2025). So you get the picture, I hope; there’s a talented tribe of independent UK filmmakers and actors out there, who have busily worked on lots and lots of genre gems you need to seek out.

Tyler Winchcombe is Nick in BONE KEEPER
Tyler Winchcombe is Nick in BONE KEEPER

Okay, let’s fully focus back on BONE KEEPER!

The term ‘Lovecraftian’ tends to be overused by reviewers when they are describing tentacled monsters in movies, but in the case of BONE KEEPER the description is quite apt. These creatures are originally from space, with their arrival occurring a long time ago, thus making them an ancient alien species, the kind of organisms often featured in H.P. Lovecraft’s lore. The way the octo-things are physically pliable and varied in body shape also adds a Lovecraftian unknowability to them. The discovery of a central space in the cave that serves as a repository for a goo-coated cluster of remains, including pieces of skeleton, trinkets, and other items once owned by past victims, drives home the notion that the lifeforms dwelling here are entities that are a conglomeration of feral alien instincts merged with some vaguely-remembered assimilated human memories.

Above: 3 shots of the cave creatures!
Above: 3 shots of the cave creatures!

I certainly would like to see these monsters return in another film. Bring on a sequel!

This thing is slimy, weird and dangerous!

A longer version of this BONE KEEPER review is featured in issue 11 of Imaginator Magazine. For more details about the magazine click HERE!

Poster

Monumental

Six sea kayakers paddle down a tidal estuary into a privately-owned valley in Devon, where they intend to camp for the night. Making their way along the narrowing estuary they reach marshy wetland, with bleached trees standing in an expanse of mudflats… and from the branches of these dead trees hang the bones of animals. Though they’re a little spooked by this sight, the group pushes on, traversing a creek worming its way through a marsh filled with brown reeds. After heading down a widening river overhung with trees, they reach a flat meadow, which they decide will be the place to pitch camp. But, after something ghastly happens to one of their group when she wanders into the trees clinging to the sloping side of the valley, the kayakers are plunged into an ever-worsening, nightmarish situation from which there is no escape until the next high tide… 

Monumental book cover

MONUMENTAL is the latest novel from Adam Nevill, and it is a real page-turner! With the estuary’s tidal cycle enforcing a ticking clock element on the story, the reader knows that everything happening in the plot will be dictated by this tight timeline, plus the enclosed valley environment itself ensures this yarn becomes a nerve-shredding contained survival-horror experience that piles extra pressure onto the protagonists who find themselves with very restricted routes of escape.
I don’t want to go into too much detail with regard to the plot, as only the limited edition hardback copies of MONUMENTAL have been published so far, but I will say that as soon as the novel begins Nevill immediately and effectively sketches-in the character dynamics between all the kayakers – and the way in which he introduces the Wyrm Valley really places you there in the landscape with the unsuspecting group. It will come as no surprise that MONUMENTAL deals with ancient pagan terror, with the particular horrors depicted here sticking in your mind long after you’ve closed the book. What’s really cool is the way Nevill has continued expanding upon his pantheon of fearful entities lurking in the same region of the UK that has also been featured in his books THE REDDENING, CUNNING FOLK and THE VESSEL. Though each of these novels are standalone stories, there is definitely the suggestion that South West England is the focal point of an accumulation of primordial evil.

Horror face!

The unspeakably loathsome central thing in MONUMENTAL (which I REALLY want to describe to you but I am using all of my willpower to restrain myself from doing so!) is a repulsively outstanding horror that H.P. Lovecraft would’ve been proud of! And talking of classic writers of yesteryear, the action beats later in the story, involving lead character Marcus taking on swarms of pallid terrors, have the exciting vitality of Robert E. Howard’s propulsive prose. Honestly, this is a book that’s simultaneously horrific and extraordinarily exciting! 

This is my signed limited edition hardback copy!
This is my signed limited edition hardback copy!

Nevill’s novels THE RITUAL and NO ONE GETS OUT ALIVE have both been turned into movies, and MONUMENTAL is screaming to be adapted for the big screen too. Come on Hollywood, somebody make this into a movie now!

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Adam Nevill explains how he oversees his horrifically cool imprint, Ritual Limited, in Imaginator Magazine’s Folk Horror Special Edition Volume 2.