BUNKER is a bold attempt to capture the psychological warfare of trench life within the confines of a subterranean cell.

The film’s claustrophobic setting and the slow-burn tension are elements familiar to anyone who has studied the strategic and operational impacts of confined spaces on combat effectiveness. How it f-ed up a soldier’s mental state in one way or another. The US military has training grounds where we test selected soldiers to see how well they operate in confined spaces. It’s like being a rate in an underground maze, not fun at all.

Here’s what we think about BUNKER.

Bunker Photo
This actor looks way too clean to be living in a World War I bunker. I’m not buying it.

Plot Summary

BUNKER is a horror flick set in the chaos of World War I. A group of American and British soldiers get caught in a nasty ambush and have to hide out in a creepy underground bunker. But here’s the twist: they bring a German prisoner of war (POW) along for the ride. As they dig deeper into the earth, they realize they’re not alone. Some seriously freaky stuff starts happening, coming to a realization that it’s not just the war messing with their minds now.

A Spotlight on the Mental Battles of War

The director’s choice to focus on the characters’ psychological deterioration is a commendable departure from more conventional war film narratives.

BUNKER, set towards the dusk of World War I, successfully conveys the sense of isolation, paranoia, and the erosion of sanity that often plagues soldiers in prolonged, confined environments.

pacing, while appropriate for building suspense, could have been more dynamic to reflect the unpredictable nature of warfare.

Not to mention how the inclusion of a supernatural element, while adding a horror element, diverts focus from the core themes of human endurance and the psychological complexities of combat.