Something Beneath
Evil Lurks In The Most Unlikely Of Places
When a mysterious black slime oozes up from the plumbing to infiltrate a new conference center, it causes attendees at an environmental convention who come in contact with it to have horrific hallucinations and nightmarish visions of past tragedies. Environmentalist priest Father Douglas Middleton must team up with conference coordinator Khali Spence to stop the slime -- or die trying.
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Trailers & Videos

SOMETHING BENEATH trailer - rhitv.com
Cast

Kevin Sorbo
Father Douglas Middleton

Peter MacNeill
Deadmarsh

Natalie Brown
Khali Spence

Brendan Beiser
Dr. Connolly

Frank Adamson
Lowell Kent

Brittany Scobie
Mikaela Strovsky

Brett Donahue
Tony

Blake Taylor
Reggie

Gene Pyrz
Jim Bailey

Karl Thordarson
Mr. Briggs
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Reviews
Wuchak
_**Decent creature feature with Kevin Sorbo, similar to “Phantoms”**_
An Episcopalian priest (Kevin Sorbo) leads an ecological conference at a new mountain resort, but some kind of mysterious black oil infects the people, causing hallucinations and death. What’s the source of this substance and will any of them survive? Natalie Brown plays the event coordinator, Brendan Beiser a nutty scientist and Peter MacNeill the head of security.
"Something Beneath" (2007) is a creature feature that combines elements of Star Trek’s “The Naked Time” (1966), “Phantoms” (1998) and the black oil episodes of The X-Files that started with "Piper Maru" (1996), which played a pivotal role in the series, including the first X-Files movie “Fight the Future” (1998).
Although this had a direct-to-video budget, and it’s obvious, it has defined characters, an inventive plot and a relatively entertaining story. Sorbo has his usual charisma as the amiable minister and the subplot of his relationship with Khali (Brown) is well done. Brittany Scobie is on hand as an amusingly haughty “celebrity” while Paige Bannister plays Khali’s cute assistant.
The film runs 1 hour, 30 minutes, and was filmed in Winnipeg with the mountain exterior shots obviously done in the Canadian Rockies.
GRADE: B-/C+
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