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0. ( There are no reviews yet. ) $ 292.00. Gasket Set - Mitsubishi , Iseki, Bolens, Satoh. Includes head gasket, valve cover gasket, intake gasket, exhaust gaskets, water pump gasket, water neck gasket, injector insulators, oil pan drain plug gasket, oil pump gasket, timing cover gasket, oil pan gasket, valve stem seals. PistonVay Tiền Nhanh Chỉ Cần Cmnd. A unique two-hander that pits a lost seaman against a disturbingly menacing yacht, The Boat certainly doesn’t shy away from challenging plotting, but whether it can persuade horror fans that it’s worth a look in an increasingly crowded marketplace will require some very persuasive marketing, at the very least. Not far from the Maltese port of Valetta, a local fisherman Joe Azzopardi sets out in his small outboard-motor-powered boat for a day on the water. Soon, however, a heavy fog drifts in, obscuring the shoreline and leaving him completely disoriented. A sudden collision with a drifting sailboat convinces him that he’s found safety, but boarding and searching the yacht, he finds it deserted. When he returns topside, his boat has disappeared, trapping him aboard the luxury vessel. The 40-foot Aeolus proves well-equipped and -provisioned, so he tries to raise Valetta’s port on the marine radio, but can’t make contact. The Bottom Line Not exactly built for speed. A routine trip to the latrine turns into a claustrophobic nightmare when the door jams, trapping him inside for hours listening to the sound of the boat taking on water as a freighter passes by without hailing him. When he finally breaks the door down and finds himself in waist-deep seawater, he takes drastic measures to get the bilge pumps running. Exhausted, he retreats below deck and crashes out in one of the private berths, only to find the door locked when he wakes up. Convinced that someone, or something, is somehow in control of the boat, the fisherman desperately tries to escape the Aeolus, as the yacht powers through the waves, mysteriously locked on autopilot and headed directly into a gathering storm. The central Mediterranean region surrounding Malta is rich in both folklore and classic mythology, where the demigod Aeolus was considered the “keeper of the winds” in Homer’s Odyssey. Whether such a similarly influential entity controls the sailboat and the fate of the fisherman remains unclear, or perhaps he’s been imprisoned by some sadistic manipulator controlling the vessel remotely. The final frames partially reveal the filmmakers’ perspective, but by then their rather forced narrative allusions have been squandered over the course of the film. Director Winston Azzopardi clearly knows his way around a luxury yacht, skillfully shooting in tight quarters whether above or below decks, and even inserting some modest special effects. Pacing is not his strong suit, however, and the script, co-written with Joe Azzopardi, becomes repetitive and predictable as the plotting quickly comes up against the physical limitations of the sailboat’s layout. With very few spoken lines, Joe Azzopardi’s physical demeanor effectively conveys the fisherman’s confusion and desperation, but the lack of any clear narrative resolution lends scant significance to the role. Production companies Latina Pictures, Hurricane Films Cast Joe Azzopardi Director Winston Azzopardi Screenwriters Joe Azzopardi, Winston Azzopardi Producers Joe Azzopardi, Winston Azzopardi, Roy Boulter Executive producers Rita Galea, Yolanda Golea, Sol Papadopoulos Director of photography Marek Traskowski Production designer Ino Bonello Editor Daniel Lapira Music Lachlan Anderson Venue Beyond Fest Sales Carnaby International 88 minutes THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up
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Movie Reviews By Reviewer Type All Critics Top Critics All Audience Verified Audience Prev Next The Boat isn't for everyone. It doesn't have any huge reveals, or ghastly spectral encounters. It's Christine without George Thorogood, The Shining if the only thing haunting Jack Torrance was the endless snow. Full Review Original Score 6/10 Apr 9, 2019 The Boat is a beautifully shot, well performed, and sharply edited thriller. It sails into uncharted territory and proves to be one of the year's best surprises. Hold fast! Full Review Original Score 4/5 Mar 30, 2019 It is to the Azzopardis' credit that they maintain the aura of mystery until the very end, but one cannot help but ask the question are they already thinking of The Return of The Boat? Full Review Original Score 4/5 Mar 2, 2019 As the only man on screen, and with minimal dialogue, Joe Azzopardi commands attention from the off. Full Review Oct 31, 2018 The Boat is never boring; and that is saying something for a film that includes a 30-minute sequence where the protagonist is locked in a bathroom. Full Review Original Score Oct 31, 2018 Azzopardi's physical demeanor effectively conveys the fisherman's confusion and desperation, but the lack of any clear narrative resolution lends scant significance to the role. Full Review Oct 30, 2018 The film is solid, but it feels resigned to the limitations of its premise rather than actively pushing against its boundaries. Is there anything inherently wrong with that? Not really. Does it make for a safer, more boring film as a result? Undoubtedly. Full Review Oct 3, 2018 [It's] a film that cleverly turns some of the film's elements, like water and the ship itself, into a ferocious monster that forces our protagonist to exhibit some quick thinking in order to survive his unbelievable experiences upon a sea-faring vehicle. Full Review Original Score 4/5 Oct 3, 2018 Ranks easily among the year's best horror films, best adventure films, and best films period. Welcome aboard indeed. Full Review Sep 23, 2018 Prev Next Do you think we mischaracterized a critic's review?
Duel’ meets All Is Lost’ as terror and tension carve a path across the open sea. By Published on September 23rd, 2018 Remember the twenty-five minutes in the middle of Dead Calm 1989 where Sam Neill struggles to escape a sinking ship? The Boat is the suspense and tension of that sequence maintained for feature length, but with a taste of the supernatural. Or 2013’s All Is Lost which stars Robert Redford alone against a similar predicament? The Boat mirrors the drama and isolation of that film, but with a splash of the unnatural. While it reminds favorably of those two fantastic films, though, The Boat is wholly its own creation marrying survival against the odds with horror of the unknown in sequences that ultimately terrify, captivate, energize, and stress the the hell out of viewers. An unnamed fisherman Joe Azzopardi in Malta heads out to sea in his small boat in pursuit of the day’s catch, but a lone and unmoored sailboat catches his eye. He ties up to it and calls out to see if anyone is in need of help, but with no response he climbs aboard to investigate. The boat is seemingly abandoned, but as he goes room to room it’s clear someone was recently there — a smear of fresh blood suggests it may not have ended well for them. Returning to the deck he discovers that his own boat is gone — did his rope simply come untethered or was it released intentionally? As a John Carpenter-worthy fog rolls across the water he moves quickly into survival mode, but with the engine not working, the radio capturing only silence, and the suspicion that he’s not alone weighing behind his eyes, survival may not even be an option. Films featuring a single character aren’t common, and rarer still are the great ones, but The Boat sails quickly towards the top of the list. Azzopardi’s fisherman has no back story or baggage here and instead quite literally wakes up and motors directly into a nightmare. Rather than panic or start talking to himself — a clunky tool typically used to connect with audiences — he proceeds to assess the situation and find a way out of it. He captivates through his calm and confidence, and on the strictly survival side of things his knowledge and know-how work to inspire viewers towards even the smallest of cheer-worthy victories. Seriously, there are at least a dozen obstacles here that would have left me for dead in my ignorance. It’s refreshing to see such a capable character undaunted by his increasing challenges, and while his frustrations grow they don’t turn him away from the task at hand. Tension rises, though as his bad luck reveals itself as something far more ominous than mere chance. Something or someone is actively working against him, and as doors lock behind him and the boat steers towards additional dangers the question of who or what is at the helm takes second place behind the one regarding how he’s going to escape its grip. At 100 minutes a film like this could easily risk losing steam, but the script by Azzopardi and director/co-writer/brother? Winston Azzopardi keeps things moving forward with a taut efficiency. There’s never a dull moment as there’s never really a down moment. The fisherman moves from one challenge to the next, each following a progression both natural and unnatural, and his composure only wavers in the most extreme situations — of which there are more than a few. The possible sound of footsteps on the deck above or of a rope being sawed catch his imagination and ratchet up the tension en route to an absolute gem of an ending. Genre films have a spotty track record in that department as filmmakers aren’t always confident in their exit strategy, but the payoff here is incredibly satisfying and almost suggests a begrudging appreciation of sorts in its denouement. The score by Lachlan Anderson finds its own beauty and rhythm as it matches the sea’s balance between the calm and aggressive, and it kicks into propulsive overdrive during the film’s more immediate thrills. Cinematographer Marek Traskowski, meanwhile, has the daunting task of working equally well on the vastness of the open ocean and the tight confines of the sailboat. He succeeds in capturing both the isolation in vastness and the more claustrophobic interiors. The Boat is a work of pure mastery as it blends a tale of survival at sea with a growing sense of dread and mystery, and the resulting experience is a taut and thrilling adventure into the unknown. It ranks easily among the year’s best horror films, best adventure films, and best films period. Welcome aboard indeed. Related Topics Fantastic Fest, Film Festivals, Horror Rob Hunter has been writing for Film School Rejects since before you were born, which is weird seeing as he's so damn young. He's our Chief Film Critic and Associate Editor and lists 'Broadcast News' as his favorite film of all time. Feel free to say hi if you see him on Twitter FakeRobHunter. Recommended Reading All the Horror You Need to Stream in June 2023 Summer is just around the bend, so why not celebrate with a Subspecies’ marathon? 12 Movies to Watch if You Like Evil Dead Rise’ With a new entry in the delightfully demented Evil Dead’ franchise, we gift you with a hand-picked list of movies you’ll like if you’re a fan of Evil Dead Rise.’ Is The Wolfman’ Remake Really As Bad As Everyone Says? Aoooooooo, werewolves of hum-drum. The Enduring Folk Horror of The Devil and Daniel Webster’ “I’d fight ten thousand devils to save a New Hampshire man.”
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