IT FOLLOWS (2014) [4K LIMITED EDITION]

by James “Magic” Perkins

Almost 10 years ago, Independent filmmaker David Robert Mitchell exploded onto the genre scene with his masterpiece, It Follows.

The story follows 19-year-old Jay (Maika Monroe) who, after a chance sexual encounter, begins to be stalked by an unknown shapeshifting entity that will follow her and hunt her down, slowly but surely, unless she passes on the curse through sexual intercourse. This supernatural yet poignant horror tale blew audiences away with its clever and masterful blend of the real and unreal, with topical and social commentary on coming-of-age, sex, class divide, and human connection. It’s terrifying yet incredibly alluring to watch, with you watching every single inch of the screen looking for who or what could be ‘It’. Mitchell’s attention to detail with his writing and directing, coupled with a memorable and orgasmic score from Disasterpiece puts It Follows right up there as not only one of the best horror films in the last decade but one of the most impactful and unforgettable horrors of all time.

The special features included in this fabulous 4K release are worth the re-purchase price alone. The new audio commentaries from a collection of lecturers and journalists offer some fascinating insight into a deeper contextual analysis of the film and its themes; interviews with actors Keir Gilchrist and Olivia Luccardi give their perception on working under David Robert Mitchell; and our personal favourite, an interview with composer Rich Vreeland (Disasterpiece), in which he discusses making a truly unique and definitive horror score. Alongside those eye-opening special features, we are also gifted with interviews with the producer and production designer, topped off nicely with a thought-provoking video essay entitled It Follows: The Architecture of Loneliness in which Joseph Wallace explores the narrative weaving of the film’s themes and the location of Detroit and how and why they work so well hand in hand.

This 4K release is worth every penny, whether you are already a fan of the film or an intrepid new viewer – this is one to add to your collection.

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The 4K Collectors Edition of It Follows is available to buy now on 4K Blu-ray from Second Sight’s Online Store and Amazon.

 

EVERYBODY DIES BY THE END

everybody dies

by Martin Unsworth

Obnoxious horror auteur Alfred Costella (Vinny Curran) plans his comeback film, which will also be his last, so he hires a film crew to document the making of his gory masterpiece, Everybody Dies by the End. Calvin (writer/co-director Ian Tripp) and his soundman, Mark (Joshua Wyble), witness the filmmaker at his worst as he pushes and humiliates his actors before things head into the inevitable shocking climax.

Opening the film is a vintage interview in which Costella shows his demented side when quizzed by the laid-back, sardonic chat show host Willy Wilson (Bill Oberst, Jr). Going completely off the rails, this is the moment that put a nail in the coffin of Costella’s career, and it’s an excellent sequence that replicates the arty, high-and-mighty film shows of the ‘80s perfectly. It’s an exaggeration of those goading chats with famous people who storm off when their egos are not massaged enough.

The rest of the movie is shot through the documentarian’s lens and shows the nasty side of filmmaking. He’s an aggressive, egotistical director who has surrounded himself with sycophants who he’ll butter up and smack down in equal measure. Co-directed by Tripp and Ryan Schafer, it’s an uncomfortable satire of a toxic workplace that’s packed with pitch-black comedy. While it doesn’t always land its target, it’s an entertaining, if predictable, look at the nastier side of Hollywood. With a director on the precipice of a murderous, nihilistic breakdown, fuelled by his sense of self-importance and talent, the film is a damning indictment of bad behaviour in the workplace, and although it’s awkward to experience in places, it keeps things watchable.

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Everybody Dies at the End is released on digital platforms in the US on September 22nd.

 

THE NUN 2

the nun 2

by Daniel Goodwin

Five years after The Nun spun off from The Conjuring 2, franchise familiar Michael Chaves directs its first follow-up, which sees returning Sister Irene (Taissa Farmiga) travel to France after being assigned by the church to investigate a series of suspicious deaths thought to be connected to Demon Nun (Bonnie Aarons). Irene’s investigation leads her to an ancient relic stashed by a monk in a monastery, which may help finally defeat the evil.

A flaccid set-up resorts to textbook scares and synthetic CGI within a story that, at first, feels like a series of set-pieces with characters treading precariously down dimly-lit corridors leading to inevitable jump-scares and/or death. The second act reunites Irene with Maurice (Jonas Bloquet) from the first film, who is now the Boarding school groundskeeper and features a few sharp shocks at a magazine stand, within twisted vision/dream sequences involving a hooded figure getting stabbed in the face, and a scene with a pasty-faced alter-boy.

The subplot follows child student Sophie (Katelyn Rose Downey) being preyed upon by bullies but taken care of by Maurice. Maurice is befriended by Sophie’s mother (Anna Popplewell) but suffers from potentially paranormal sleepwalking, which may bring harm to his new-found friends.

The Nun 2 starts as a tepid follow-up but deviates into a rollicking monster mash as the pace escalates, events intensify, and the story buds into supernatural bedlam involving possessed caretakers, gnarly monster goats and the titular nun who wreak havoc and turns an initially dull sequel into big daft, punchy, by-the-numbers nun fun that’s better than its predecessor but somewhat hampered by CGI overkill and a cumbersome first act.

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The Nun 2 is in cinemas from September 8th. 

GOOD BOY

Good Boy

There are always perils when it comes to dating. Meeting on Tinder could bring some big issues, as happens when Sigrid (Katrine Lovise Øpstad Fredriksen) meets the shy and charming Christian (Gard Løkke). Sigrid’s self-deprecating profile shows that she’s prepared to accept anything, but she doesn’t expect Christian’s four-legged friend to be a man in a costume. She’s convinced to give Christian another shot. However, when she finds out that he’s a multi-millionaire and even begins to accept Frank, the dog, as man’s best friend, she agrees to go away for the weekend at a remote cabin, but she finds out something much more disturbing is afoot …

Far from a shaggy dog tale, Good Boy opens up interesting questions of identity, trust, and compliance. Although Sigrid is almost a walkover when she first meets Christian (they sleep together on the first date), her reaction to seeing Frank for the first time is genuine, and it’s only the lure of his money and the chance of an ‘easy life’ that brings her back into his arms.

The first half of Good Boy is presented as if it were an awkward romance, but things soon take a turn for the sinister as Sigrid learns more about the enigmatic Christian. Director Viljar Bøe builds some great tension with the pair’s relationship, and then Sigrid’s flirtation with Frank brings things into a whole other realm, and not exactly where you’d expect. It’s a film that benefits from going in as blindly as possible for maximum enjoyment.

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GOOD BOY had its UK premiere at Pigeon Shrine FrightFest on August 28th and will be on digital platforms from September 8th in US and 11th in the UK.

FEAR THE NIGHT

fear the night

by Joel Harley

The latest thriller from writer/director Neil LaBute (The Wicker Man, Lakeview Terrace)sees a bachelorette party invaded by a gang of gun-toting men on a violent treasure hunt. Luckily, war veteran Tess (Maggie Q) is on hand to hold the front line, giving Bart (James Carpinello) and his thugs far more than they had bargained for.

Q headlines this hybrid of action film and home invasion thriller, ably supported by Kat Foster as her more outspoken, less able sister, Beth. Between them, they manage to rise above the rote characterisation and predictable plot twists, largely thanks to Foster’s chops and Q’s action poise. There are others there too (including Highdee Kuan, as their other sister, and bride-to-be, Rose), but no one gets to shine here.

Certainly not the villains – a paper-thin gang of white trash ruffians with no sense of menace nor charisma between them. As a vehicle for Maggie Q stomping misogynist hillbillies into the ground, it’s aggressively fine (not that the choreography or special effects is particularly exciting either), but suffers in comparison to the vastly superior – and similar – You’re Next and Becky.

Offering little beyond pedestrian action sequences and surface-level observations on female empowerment, Fear the Night is a sad, limp disappointment.

Fear the Night is out now on demand in the US and will be released digitally in the UK on September 25th.

 

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MERCY FALLS

mercy falls

A mix of serial killer, backwoods slasher, and survivalist horror, Ryan Hendrick’s Mercy Falls is an often tense, if routine, thriller that delivers some impressive gore and stunning landscapes.

A group of friends meet up for a hiking trip in order to find a cabin left to Rhona (Lauren Lyle) by her father. She has mixed memories about the area (not least of the day that she saw her dad (Gilly Gilchrist) put a trapped horse out of its misery) and only a vague idea of where they’re going. Her best friend, Heather (Layla Kirk) has fixed Rhona up with the hunky Donnie (Joe Rising) while she’s there with her fella Scott (James Watterson). Unfortunately, Donnie brings along his laddish buddy Andy (Eoin Sweeney), who, larking about on their night at a hikers’ lodge, sees Heather have a drink poured over her white top. Trying to dry it off, she’s helped in the loos by Carla (Nicolette McKeown), who they’d previously ignored while hitchhiking. Heather invites Carla to join the group, much to Rhona’s annoyance. It’s clear when they set off the next day, however, that Carla might have the skills lacking in the others when it comes to being out in the open. When there’s an accident involving one the them, Carla’s instinct takes over, leaving the badly injured lad dead. |They are all naturally horrified, but Carla convinces the rest that they are complicit and they should get rid of the body and carry on their hike. What the team don’t yet realise is that Carla is military trained, and this is not her first rodeo.

Co-writer (alongside Meliá Grasska) and director Hendrick have crafted an impressive, if flawed, brooding tale of survival that’s well-acted by the opposing characters of Rhona and Carla. Both Lyle and McKeown are fantastic in their roles. Lyle, in particular, exudes a vulnerable performance that demands sympathy for Rhona, which is a world apart from the other, more oversexed members of the hiking group.

Where Mercy Falls comes up lacking is in some of the more contrived dialogue and heavily laid on menace of Carla. It’s clear from the moment we see her hitch-hiking, particularly with the talk in the car of not picking her up because she’d probably kill them all, we know she’s going to be the antagonist. There’s no sly twist to pull the rug, and that’s where the film suffers. There are moments where the story could go in different directions. There are atmospheric tales of sirens recited by Homer-loving Scott, and had the group not discovered Carla’s secret after the ‘mercy killing’, she wouldn’t have had to go on a murder spree.

The film is helped incredibly by John Rhodes’ cinematography, which really makes the most of the beautiful locations and Stephen Wright’s atmospheric but unobtrusive score. While Mercy Falls doesn’t quite knock it out of the park, it’s an entertaining survival horror that delivers when it needs to.

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Mercy Falls is in cinemas now and arrives on digital on November 6th, 2023.

THE HANGED GIRL

The Hanged Girl

by Rich Cross

Do you remember that old-school party game Consequences? Each player takes a turn to write down a fragment of a story before folding over the paper and passing it to the next person to continue the narrative with no knowledge of what’s gone before. Watching The Hanged Girl (previously titled The Haunting at Saint Joseph’s), it feels like the production company might have adopted the same scripting technique. From a humdrum but explicable starting point, the film lurches through a series of bizarre, arbitrary plot flips which stretch any connection to its original premise beyond breaking point.

A group of friends and family head into the great outdoors for a pre-nuptials weekend break. Their destination is an old chapel, refurbished into a high-end holiday let but implicated in rumours about the building’s macabre past involving stories of human sacrifice. As the group tries to relax, latent tensions and awkward secrets surface. This culminates in lots of shouty arguments and, in the risible final act, multiple bloody deaths – none of which have any link to the ancient curse.

The production values on The Hanged Girl are reasonable enough, and while there’s no tension or atmosphere, and nothing exciting about the way the film is shot, it’s competently made. It’s simply that the filmmakers seem to have no idea what story they’re trying to tell. No one’s character journey makes sense, and none of the script’s wider themes is developed, so they end up being left (in an oddly fitting way) hanging. After the chaotic final twenty minutes, the film ends so abruptly that you’re left wondering if the rental company turned up on set to collect the cameras.

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THE HANGED GIRL is released on streaming platforms and on DVD in the US on September 5th.

BLUE BEETLE

by Paul Mount

As the DCEU stumbles shame-facedly towards the door marked ‘James Gunn reboot’, it can at least briefly raise its head in acknowledgement of the fact that, in the wake of a series of underperforming and creatively wanting superhero blockbusters, it’s finally delivered something significantly more assured even if its Box Office prospects are no better than its less-than-illustrious predecessors. No one was really interested or invested in the arrival of Blue Beetle – superhero characters rarely get much more obscure – but the film is actually a breath of fresh air in a genre that’s now horribly oversubscribed and in danger of collapsing under the weight of itself.

Jaime Reyes (Cobra Kai’s Xolo Mariduena, lighting up the screen and clearly having the time of his life) returns home from University and is reunited with his family in Palmera City, only to find that they have fallen on hard times – they are facing eviction, the family business has gone bust, and his father is recovering from a  heart attack. Jaime’s determination to find a job leads him to the door of Kord Industries, where the ruthless Victoria Kord (Susan Sarandon) is working to create an army of super-soldiers by tapping into the alien energy of an artefact known as the Scarab. The Scarab inevitably finds its way into Jaime’s possession, and it quickly comes to life, fuses itself to his spine and envelops him in a powerful armoured suit. He becomes the latest Blue Beetle.

In reality, there’s nothing here we’ve not seen in umpteen superhero origin films, but director Angel Manuel Soto brings it to the screen in a blaze of vivid colour, its story centred around Jaime’s family – the supporting cast are all terrific, if a bit loud – which gives it a warmth so often eluded by earlier DCEU entries. The narrative itself is achingly familiar – baddy wants to retrieve alien tech for her own ends, and the newly-powered hero tries to come to terms with his abilities as he tries to stop her – but the family stakes allow the audience to properly invest in both the story and its cast. Budgeted at just over $100m, Blue Beetle punches well above its weight visually; the effects are terrific and give the film a scale and spectacle the equal of any film in the genre with three times the cash available.

Fast, funny, colourful, and genuinely exciting, Blue Beetle deserves a better fate than to be left on the DCEU scrap heap. It’s a genuine shame that the world’s first onscreen Latino superhero – a cultural marker that the film bears proudly but without feeling the need to shout about it – seems doomed to crash and burn into the wreckage of DC’s brasher, stupider cinematic mistakes.

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BLUE BEETLE is in cinemas now

 

OTTO BAXTER: NOT A F**KING HORROR STORY + THE PUPPET ASYLUM [FrightFest 2023]

by Martin Unsworth

35-year-old Otto Baxter has Down syndrome and has had a few documentaries made about him, and has appeared on TV numerous times over his life. The Directors and close friends Peter Beard and Bruce Fletcher plan to help Otto make a fantasised version of his life growing up as a short film.

Not a Fucking Horror Story is an emotional rollercoaster of a documentary. Otto has had a storied life already but has a passion for film and a wicked sense of humour. Beard and Fletcher don’t sugar-coat how things are; Otto can have some issues with his behaviour, particularly with boundaries when it comes to young women. As the film progresses – it started shooting well before the pandemic, and there are several real-life issues that could derail things along the way – we learn more about Otto and get to see how he copes with coming to terms with what has happened in his life and putting it onto film in the form of a 30-minute horror-musical.

The accompanying short is the film in question. The Puppet Asylum is a surreal autobiography, with Otto’s life transported to Victorian England with Paul Kaye (the actor-comedian who created Dennis Pennis) in the role of a sadistic doctor and villain of the piece. Otto deliberately depicts himself as a monster and is portrayed in his teenage years by Ruben Reuter. It’s a well-made film, with some genuinely disturbing moments (and songs!)

The takeaway from the documentary and the short is that no matter what life has thrown at you, it’s sometimes possible to live your dreams and don’t underestimate someone’s ability.

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Otto Baxter: Not a Fucking Horror Story + The Puppet Asylum screened at Pigeon Shrine FrightFest on August 28th and is in selected cinemas in September, and will be on Sky Documentaries and NOW from September 23rd.

I AM MONSTERS! [FrightFest 2023]

by Martin Unsworth

A filmed version of the acclaimed one-man autobiographical show from actor/writer Nicholas Vince, I Am Monsters! is a deeply personal and emotional look at the man who has helped bring to the screen some of the most iconic creatures in modern cinema.

Told in his own words, Vince takes us through his early life, how he got involved in acting, and how he got to know Clive Barker and got the role of Chatterer in Hellraiser. There are plenty of amusing stories about playing the various monsters, but it’s the much more serious topics that hit home the most. Vince tells us about incidents during his life – some of which are very harrowing, such as his surgery at a young age – that have informed his outlook and is brutally honest about everything. As well as playing monsters in film, he is a monster, he tells us.

Partly shot during a live performance of his show, with many sections filmed separately, this is an incredibly intimate movie, with Vince often directing his monologues to the camera as if he were talking to us one-on-one. A few cute animations (from Borley Rectory’s Ashley Thorpe) illustrate some moments of his life in a lovely fashion. There are also a number of readings from classic works of fiction, such as Dracula and The Island of Dr Moreau, that highlight Vince’s dramatic flair. The transitions between some of the scenes could have been smoother, but generally, this is a fantastic reproduction of the show and never less than enthralling.

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I Am Monsters had its world premiere at Pigeon Shrine FrightFest on August 28th.