Dark Country

Film Noir B-Movie directed by Thomas Jane. Starring Thomas Jane, Lauren German, Ron Perlman. A couple en route from Las Vegas are forced to deal with a body out in the desert making their honeymoon one hellish ride. The film was shot with the intention of being released in 3D format, but the studio chose to release it straight to DVD. Also features a cameo by Ron Perlman, for some reason.

This film contains examples of:


 * Accidental Marriage: The film opens the morning after its leads get hitched in Las Vegas
 * A Date with Rosie Palms: see Auto Erotica
 * Auto Erotica: Complete with something bad directly following the act's conclusion.
 * B-Movie: At first it looks like its going to be a deconstruction, but questionable green screen effects and narmful acting will make sure this is remembered as one no matter what it's director's intent actually was.
 * Chroma Key: The film makes heavy use of green screen shooting. Probably as a result of being shot as a 3D release, many of the green screen shots have an extremely strange quality to them that borders on Special Effect Failure.
 * Dark and Troubled Past: Gina has one, however.
 * Direct to Video
 * Film Noir: Almost to the extent of feeling like parody in the beginning, but played deadly straight from the second act on.
 * Fridge Horror: If you start trying to piece together what happened off screen  the horror will hit you like someone dropped a refrigerator on your head.
 * Impassable Desert: A very weird paranormal take on this trope.
 * Lightning Can Do Anything:
 * Narm: Jane's portrayal of Dick is practically a trope codifier.
 * Narm Charm: For all Dick's narmfullness, there's still something likeable about the guy.
 * No Ending:
 * Screwed by the Network: Jane not only feels releasing the movie on dvd instead of its intended 3D theatrical format hurt the film, the final cut is far from his favorite one.
 * Special Effect Failure: Partially averted. While a lot of the green screen shots look extremely strange, this actually works fairly well with the surreal mood of the film. Only a few shots fail outright.
 * Stable Time Loop:
 * The Sheriff: Ron Perlman, in a memorable bit part
 * The Reveal: The final moments of the film has a big one.
 * The Un-Reveal: The Reveal is also a giant Unreveal, answering one question but putting basically everything else up for grabs.
 * What Could Have Been: The movie was shot with a 3D theatrical release in mind. While it's unlikely the film would have found much more than cult movie success at the box office, just the ice cube scene alone would have been worth the price of admission.
 * The Un-Reveal: The Reveal is also a giant Unreveal, answering one question but putting basically everything else up for grabs.
 * What Could Have Been: The movie was shot with a 3D theatrical release in mind. While it's unlikely the film would have found much more than cult movie success at the box office, just the ice cube scene alone would have been worth the price of admission.