Reviews Mainstream reviews for
The Rift have been largely negative, with constant criticism of its derivative nature but conflicting opinions about its special effects. William Green of
Sight and Sound excoriated the film, calling it a "lamentable ocean-floor thriller" populated by "desperate actors". Nigel Floyd of
Fear magazine dismissed it as "[a] by-the-numbers Spanish submarine adventure, whose belated entry into the [underwater horror cycle] only serves to emphasize its redundancy. He also noted that "the model work and creature effects plumb new depths of ineptitude."
Leonard Maltin gave the film his lowest rating, stating that "[a]nybody who sticks around for the climax ought to be decorated for their trouble [...] As usual, R. Lee Ermey acts circles around most of his co-stars; but, ultimately, even he cannot sell this bill of goods." The
BBC's
Radio Times called it "unfathomable junk with soggy suspense and damp drama" helmed by a "hack director" that "doesn’t have the budget, special effects know-how or acting smarts" to emulate its contemporaries. In his
Creature Features book, John Stanley found it to be "an ineffective
Aliens knock-off." James O'Neill, author of the book
Sci-Fi on Tape, called it "well cast" but "sunk by flat direction and unimpressive FX". In
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Movies, C.J. Henderson assessed that
The Rift merely consisted of "monsters and page after page of bad dialogue", although it offered "a few good effects". In his
Horror and Science Fiction Films compendium, Donald C. Willis was mixed, crediting "some okay makeup and scenic effects", but noting a "functional, cliched story". In trade publication
Variety, a reviewer identified as Besa. wrote that "
The Rift comes just a little too late, since comparisons with
The Abyss will be inevitable" but "[t]he all-important effects are on the whole well handed." Since it resurfaced on modern media, the film has enjoyed a modest reevaluation by the enthusiast press.
VideoScope wrote that, while it followed several underwater monster movies, Piquer Simón "succeeds in delivering what is probably the most enjoyable of the bunch", as he keeps the action "fast-moving" and "ladles on the gore" to get around his modest ressources.
Ain't It Cool News complimented the effects, considering them "at least as decent as
Deep Star Six and
Leviathan" and concluded that despite being "full of action movie clichés", it was "a fun little ride".
Den of Geek found that "
The Rift isn’t big, and it sure isn’t clever, but it’s jaw-droppingly entertaining."
Accolades ==See also==