Wednesday, 11 June 2025

The Protector (2025) - Post-Apocalyptic Film Review


It's been a while since I last viewed a post-apocalyptic film for review, so I was on board to give the Raul Gasteazoro written, directed, and co-produced thriller The Protector a fair chance. This may be cribbing from the homework of the Mad Max series of films, but offers a more hopeful spin on the end of civilised society.

This takes place in 2042, a time where a variety of factors have led to the fall of mankind. An incurable disease known as 'the rot' has killed much of the population, which has coincided with virtually everyone left being infertile. Added to the misery is a severe water shortage that is changing the world into a barren wasteland. Key (Marguerite Moreau - Queen of the Damned, The Mighty Ducks) is a prisoner of what is left of the corrupted government. Local government warlord Gael (Aryeh-Or - Charmed TV show, Siren TV show) knows that the last clean natural water source still remaining resides on a Native American reservation, but he is unable to get to it due to the land around the reservation being booby-trapped. With Key having been married to a Native American woman in the past, Gael frees her, on the condition that she show him a way past the many traps (due to her wife having revealed a way through to her before her death). Key's mission is made much more difficult when she discovers a young boy named Kellan (Mark Lane III) out in the wastelands and decides to become his protector. This immediately makes her a huge target due to the remaining government offering a substantial reward for the delivery of any child to their care for testing on.

The Mad Max vibe starts strong, initially in my head I was thinking of Key as 'Mad Maxine', though as the movie goes along she is shown to have more compassion and hope than that other wastelander. Her backstory is revealed via a series of black and white flashbacks, tragic, but also a little silly as it all revolves around a post-apocalyptic sport named 'dust jousting' that is as stupid as it sounds. Still, what sort of post-apocalyptic film would it be without its version of a fall of society sport. The present day stuff is your typical dust filled wasteland vibe. People going around wearing surely vision restricting goggles and face coverings. The good people often finding themselves at the mercy of Gael's violent and brutish henchmen, who travel around in a motorbike convoy. The impression of a wasteland is carried out well, but at times it did feel like a set of sperate locations rather than a sprawling world. I found the more hopeful feel of the storyline at times a little soppy, such as on two separate occasions when bad guys decide to become good guys purely from receiving a little hope. Protagonists were mostly decent, and while I did think Gael made for an intimidating antagonist figure, he got far too little screen time to really make too much of an impression.

Some of the special effects left a little to be desired. Chief of these was an early van explosion that had fire that really didn't look the most realistic. On the flipside, there are plenty of beautifully choreographed fight sequences that show Key almost effortlessly being able to take out scores of bad guys in close quarters combat as if she was some sort of apocalyptic Batman. These fight scenes packed a punch thanks to some crunchy sound effects, and never failed to look great. The best of these had Key and the people she was fighting all shown on screen as black silhouettes, lovely to watch! 

The Protector was a decent post-apocalyptic movie, though its story of hope didn't feel all that novel within the genre. It mostly worked well to the limitations of its budget, able to tell this slightly generic story in a well realised way. It might not be the most original film, but I had fun watching this regardless. The Protector came to theatres and On Demand on May 23rd, distributed by Vertical Entertainment in partnership with JD Beaufils of Blacktop International.

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