Corporate Retreat opens with a bucket of blood. Not a tasteful streak across a white wall. A bucket. By the eight minute mark, somebody is dead, the soundtrack is strutting, and I know this workplace has skipped orientation and gone directly to the exit interview.
I appreciate a film that tells me what it is before I get comfortable.
Director Aaron Fisher, who wrote the film with Kerri Lee Romeo, traps the executives of Immaculate Pond Technologies inside a remote luxury retreat. Ginger Hayes, played by Odeya Rush, is the only person who does not work for the company. Her boyfriend Cliff told her they were going away together and somehow forgot to mention the matching uniforms, forced bonding, and coworkers. The weekend was already a crime before the guns came out.
The Company Directory Is Bleeding
The classic character title cards are a smart introduction to an ensemble this large. Each executive arrives with a name, a position, and a personality that can be understood before the body count begins. It feels like somebody combined a grindhouse cast roll with LinkedIn.
Those titles also expose the problem sitting underneath the company. Everyone has a place in the hierarchy. Everyone knows who signs the checks, who controls the technology, who handles the money, and who will probably report the murders to human resources after the weekend.
Then retreat guides Amber and Lola, played by Zión Moreno and Sasha Lane, introduce the Seven Gateways. The exercises promise spiritual enlightenment. What they deliver is poison, bloodshed, and an increasingly desperate hunt for the materials needed to create an antidote.
Poison is a hell of a motivator.
Maybe Leave
I understand that horror movies depend on people making questionable decisions. Without them, half the genre would end after someone hears a noise in the basement and immediately moves to another state.
Still, maybe leave after the first time they try to kill the group.
Corporate Retreat does not give its characters much time to consider the option. The first kill arrives before the movie has properly settled into its chair, and the violence keeps the 89 minute runtime moving. There is always another gateway, another corporate grievance, or another employee discovering that the retreat’s cancellation policy is unusually strict.
That speed helps the comedy. It is less successful at building suspense. Once the movie establishes that anyone can die at any moment, several later confrontations become waiting rooms for the next effect. The blood arrives. The dread occasionally gets stuck in traffic.
Alan Ruck Runs the Meeting
Alan Ruck plays Arthur Scott, the ousted founder of Immaculate Pond Technologies. Arthur has taken every wounded billionaire impulse, wrapped it in spiritual language, and turned it into a leadership philosophy.
Ruck never begs for sympathy. Arthur believes he was betrayed, which is enough for him to treat revenge like a mandatory professional development course. He delivers threats with the confidence of a man who has never been told that a meeting could have been an email.
Ginger works because she has no position inside Arthur’s corporate mythology. Her abnormal psychology background gives her a way to examine him while everyone else is still responding to him as a former employer. Rush brings some welcome resistance to a room full of people who have been trained to obey the person holding the most power.
Lane and Moreno are having a different kind of fun. Amber and Lola deliver instructions, threats, and casual cruelty with the bright energy of resort employees determined to keep the scheduled activities running. Several people are dead, but the retreat still has an itinerary.
The soundtrack is one of the film’s best employees. It arrives on time, understands the assignment, and carries scenes that could have sagged beneath exposition about poison, spiritual gateways, and old workplace grudges.
The opening music gives the first burst of violence a playful swagger. Later cues keep nudging the film away from complete misery, even as the retreat becomes increasingly ugly. Composer Anna Drubich understands that this cannot sound like a funeral for 89 straight minutes. The movie wants its bloodshed to hurt, but it also wants the audience to have a little fun watching several executives discover that their job titles have no survival value.
That contrast is where Corporate Retreat is most comfortable. The music keeps a grin near the surface. The practical gore keeps wiping it off.
Practical Gore With Benefits
Special makeup effects designer Gary J. Tunnicliffe gives the violence weight. Fisher has said that most of the blood and gore was created practically, with the film’s most violent moments completed without visual effects. It shows. Bodies bend, split, leak, and generally stop qualifying for the company health plan.
The effects have texture. They occupy the same space as the actors, and the performers can react to something more convincing than a marker waiting to become blood later. The film is much better at showing damage than preparing us for it, but the damage is impressive.
There is also enough variation to keep the retreat from becoming one long red blur. Fisher knows the audience came to see these exercises go wrong. He does not become shy when it is time to demonstrate exactly how wrong.
Nobody Is Getting a Promotion
The corporate satire is broad, but corporate culture has never been known for its subtlety. Arthur demands loyalty from employees he considers disposable. The executives talk about teamwork after spending their careers competing for authority. Even the retreat’s promise of enlightenment sounds like something created by a consultant who charges by the syllable.
The poison turns that culture into a survival mechanism. Cooperation is mandatory, but every person in the room has been trained to protect their position first. Arthur does not need to teach them selfishness. He only needs to add a deadline.
Some of the characters never become much more than their titles. The introductions make the group easy to follow, but they also reveal how thin a few of them are. When those characters die, the practical effects leave a stronger impression than the loss.
That limits the satire. A company can treat workers like interchangeable parts, but a film needs to give us enough humanity to feel the cruelty of that exchange. Corporate Retreat occasionally crosses a name off the organizational chart before I have learned much beyond the department.
Corporate Retreat arrived on digital platforms July 10 and is now available to rent or purchase through Prime Video, Apple TV, Fandango at Home, DirecTV, Google Play, and other major services. Directed by Aaron Fisher, the film stars Alan Ruck, Odeya Rush, Sasha Lane, Ashton Sanders, Benjamin Norris, Tyler Alvarez, Zión Moreno, Ellen Toland, Kirby Johnson, and Rosanna Arquette.
Final Review
Corporate Retreat knows exactly how ridiculous a corporate bloodbath should be. It has a strong opening, an excellent soundtrack, nasty practical effects, and an Alan Ruck performance fueled by enough wounded ego to keep the lights on at the estate.
The satire could cut deeper, and several characters are gone before they become people. The film still moves with confidence and understands that the best corporate horror comes from changing very little. The company already sees everyone as disposable. Arthur is simply more honest about it.
3.5 out of 5
Corporate Retreat is messy, mean, and frequently fun. Attendance may be mandatory, but survival is apparently performance based.
The film is now available on demand through major digital platforms.