Kidnapped in the middle of combat, a team of special forces soldiers (led by Max Martini and LaMonica Garrett) find themselves defrosted on an alien ship being sent home as spoils of war.
With their captors hot on their tail, their soldiers flee through the maze of the ship, struggling to find a way out.
Will they survive? Can they get home?
I heard about this movie via the Action for Everyone podcast - I love a good genre hybrid (Predator, Horror Express), and this felt right in line with those films.
Sometimes you can tell a movie is going to work by its opening.
As the credits roll, we track the Voyager probe from Earth through the solar system until it is swallowed up by some kind of ship of unknown dimensions.
The fact this movie - a tight 108 minutes - takes the time to actually have a title sequence is notable. While it does convey a certain level of information with the final reveal, it is also an exercise in allowing the mood to build, and that final image of the probe being swallowed up is just vague enough in terms of showing the alien craft, that the viewer is barely in front of our heroes in terms of comprehending what has happened.
The camera plummets back to contemporary Earth; into a firefight involving our protagonists.
What I immediately loved about the movie was how earnestly mounted it is.
Kaufman is renowned for his focus on getting the basics of tactical action right, and that feeds into this film’s sense of virismiltude.
The action is clean and clear - you always know where everyone is, and the filmmakers do a good job of giving each character a sense of personality largely through body language.
While the film did not have a big budget, the action is varied, and takes place in a variety of environments (the best set-piece is a mid-film ambush in a maze of crates).
Osiris does not waste time introducing the aliens, but takes its time in terms of providing clarity about their motivations, and avoids showing them in full form for a while.
The film also manages to convey exposition visually, without info dumps.
Initially I was enjoying Osiris as a simple programmer, but it pulls off a few intriguing reveals about the situation which completely recontextualise our heroes’ plight - one being that the alien invasion was not just successful but was decades in the past.
It turns the team’s entire mission into a more existential conflict.
Boosted by an excellent cast (Linds Edwards is particularly notable as the most high-strung of the team), Osiris is a fine genre piece that deserves a look.




