Every once in a while, a horror film comes along that redefines mediocrity. Night Skies isn’t that film—it doesn’t redefine mediocrity. It bathes in it. It wallows in it like a hog in lukewarm mud, staring at you with dead eyes while you wonder how much worse it can get. Spoiler: worse. Much worse. If Signs and Fire in the Sky had a love child raised exclusively on SyFy channel reruns and gas station vodka, you’d end up with Night Skies.
Opening Credits: The Phoenix Lights—Now with John McCain Cameo
We open with Senator John McCain being interviewed about UFOs. Yes, that John McCain. No, it doesn’t make sense. Was he in on the Phoenix Lights conspiracy? Or did the producers just think, “Well, if we can’t afford Morgan Freeman, let’s get a senator who vaguely resembles an annoyed substitute teacher.” This scene adds nothing except confusion and the creeping suspicion that McCain owed somebody a favor.
Immediately afterward, a screaming woman bangs on a cabin door in the woods while aliens stalk her. It’s supposed to set the tone. Unfortunately, the tone it sets is “you should’ve rented literally anything else.”
The Road Trip from Hell (and Not in the Fun Way)
Five friends in an RV head to Vegas: Joe, Lily, Molly, June, and Matt. They are the kind of characters who make you root for the aliens by default. Matt’s the driver and general jerk, Lily’s his long-suffering pregnant girlfriend, Molly’s his sister, Joe’s the unfortunate stabbing victim, and June is Joe’s wife who exists to complain. Their bickering makes you feel like you’ve been trapped in the backseat of a family vacation gone wrong, except instead of Wally World at the end, there’s abduction trauma and death.
The group spots strange lights in the sky—the Phoenix Lights, naturally. Instead of reacting like normal humans (“Holy crap, UFOs!”), they argue about Matt’s inability to navigate back roads. Priorities.
Enter Richard: PTSD Santa with a Gun
After Matt crashes the RV into a pole because he was too busy arguing, Joe gets impaled on a knife. (Don’t ask how—this movie doesn’t do logic.) Enter Richard, a trucker and Gulf War vet who appears with vodka, medical know-how, and an emotional backstory about being a POW. He’s basically the group’s grizzled dad figure, except with the charisma of a wet tortilla.
Richard quickly becomes the film’s anchor: the man who can fix wounds, shoot guns, and glower meaningfully at the woods. Unfortunately, his main talent is shooting the wrong people. More on that later.
The Aliens: Clicking, Beaming, and Boring
The aliens themselves are your generic gray-skinned, big-eyed models. They click, they buzz, they beam people into the sky with green light. Honestly, they feel less like terrifying otherworldly beings and more like middle-management HR reps enforcing overtime policies. They don’t stalk—they inconvenience. Their menace level is about the same as a mosquito in your tent: annoying, persistent, but not really terrifying.
The movie tries to sell us “psychological terror,” suggesting the aliens can manipulate perception. What this really means is that characters see things that aren’t there, like Matt appearing in the woods begging for help when he’s already dead. It’s a creepy idea—ruined by the film’s tendency to hammer it home like a drunk carpenter.
The Body Count: Oops, Wrong Guy
Richard and Matt head out to find help, only for Richard to accidentally shoot Matt. Yes, the grizzled war vet, the one guy who should know how to handle a weapon, literally mistakes his ally for an alien and guns him down. At this point, you start rooting for the aliens—not because they’re scary, but because maybe, just maybe, they’ll thin out this cast of morons before you chew through your remote control in frustration.
Back at the RV, things go downhill fast. Radios scream, lights flicker, people get abducted through windows like a bad Six Flags ride. One by one, the group is whittled down until only Lily and Richard remain, stumbling toward the cabin from the opening scene.
The Grand Finale: Torture Porn with a UFO Discount
The ending attempts to be harrowing. Lily, who’s been pregnant this whole time (did you forget? Because the movie certainly did), gets captured and experimented on by the aliens. They steal her baby in a scene that’s supposed to be shocking but just comes off as Law & Order: SVU: Space Edition. She begs Richard to shoot her to end the pain, and he obliges. Then the aliens grab him and do their own probing experiments, because apparently this movie decided it wanted to be Hostel but forgot it was also about flying saucers.
Cut to Richard being found miles away, catatonic, with no trace of anyone else. The movie closes with text about how the Phoenix Lights are still unexplained. Thanks, film. I was hoping for closure, but a Wikipedia summary works too.
Performances: Screaming into the Void
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Jason Connery (Richard): Sean Connery’s son, proving once again that nepotism doesn’t guarantee talent. He spends most of the movie squinting and muttering like he’s trying to remember if he left the oven on.
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A.J. Cook (Lily): Best known from Criminal Minds, here reduced to the role of “sad, pregnant scream machine.”
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George Stults (Matt): He gets shot halfway through, which is the best thing that happens to the audience.
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Ashley Peldon (Molly): The “not as dumb as she looks” sister, whose main contribution is ignoring all good advice and running into alien beams like a moth to a bug zapper.
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Gwendoline Yeo (June): Exists solely to argue and mourn her husband, Joe, who bleeds out spectacularly because no one thinks to drive to a hospital.
Production Values: SyFy Special
The movie looks like it was filmed on a camcorder in someone’s backyard. The aliens are CGI rejects from a PlayStation 1 cutscene. The lighting is so murky you’ll wonder if your TV is dying. And the sound design—dear God, the sound design—is just endless clicking noises on loop. It’s less alien menace, more like someone stuck a cicada in your ear.
The Themes: Paranoia, Trauma, and… Who Cares?
The film wants to be about paranoia, trauma, and survival. It wants to explore Richard’s PTSD and how the aliens exploit fear. Instead, it’s about people making terrible decisions in the dark until the runtime is up. It’s the cinematic equivalent of listening to someone describe their weird dream in excruciating detail: “And then the radio came on by itself, and then there was clicking, and then my cousin turned into an alien, and then…” You get the idea.
Final Thoughts: Phoenix Lights? More Like Phoenix Duds
Night Skies is proof that not every UFO sighting needs a movie. The Phoenix Lights remain one of the most fascinating unexplained events in modern history. Instead of tackling that with creativity, we got a bargain-bin slasher flick with aliens instead of a masked killer. It’s dumb, it’s dull, and it wastes the talents of A.J. Cook and, frankly, your time.
If you’re looking for a good alien horror movie, watch Fire in the Sky. If you want something goofy but fun, watch Signs.If you want Night Skies, ask yourself what you did wrong in life first.
Final Rating: 1 out of 5 Abduction Beams
Not even the aliens wanted to abduct this script.
