Showing posts with label stephen mchattie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stephen mchattie. Show all posts

20 January 2015

DVD Review - Torment (2014)

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Genre:
Horror
Distributor:
Altitude Film Distribution
Release Date:
26th January 2015 (UK DVD)
Rating: 18
Director:
Jordan Barker
Katharine Isabelle, Robin Dunne, Peter DaCunha, Stephen McHattie, Noah Danby
Buy:
Torment [DVD]


Jordan Barker’s Torment probably wont be as tormenting as you’d like it to be, but its still worth a look if you’re a fan of home invasion narratives. Newly weds Sarah and Cory Morgan (Katharine Isabelle and Robin Dunne) travel to their country home to put the past behind them and start a new family, with them is Cory’s 7 year old son Liam who is still dealing with his mother’s death the year before. When the family arrive, evidence of squatters begins a night of violence and abduction.
Torment borrows a lot of narrative techniques from some of the best horror films of the past decade, (The Strangers, Sinister) but never really forms its own world or characters. A middling set of stakes and too few spooks keep the film from really demanding our attention or imposing some kind of memorable experience. It doesn’t help that Adam Wingard’s You’re Next has essentially given the home invasion sub-genre a kind of spring clean, showing how dynamic, enjoyable, and terrifying a film can be when properly balanced. Comparisons are unfortunately against Torment, which is a shame because there are some great elements here.

                Starting with the obvious, Liam’s teddy bears, once decapitated, produce some startlingly eerie old-school masks which never quite lose their creepiness. Which is important because once Mr Mouse starts talking any terror, you might have felt, will be drained away via poor dialogue drawled in a strange Bane impression. Silence, perhaps, would have been golden. Similarly the sound tracking reaches a crescendo far too soon in the film’s prologue, undermining the tension and leaving the viewer a bit bewildered in the face of the opening credits. Thankfully the music finds its footing later on, helping keep the pace up in the more action-based second half of the film, and proving especially great in a gruelling suffocation sequence.

Isabelle looks like she’s having the best time being terrified, but she’s hardly flaunting the degree of skill she paraded in American Mary. Stephen McHattie ( Lance Henriksen: Mark 2, or is Lance Henriksen a Mark 2 McHattie? ) pops up for literally 2 scenes then gets blown up so yeh, no cool old guys to save the day here. Add Dunne’s pretty uneventful inclusion and the casting becomes a bit lacklustre.

Barker clearly has some great ideas on how to shoot basic manoeuvres which could otherwise have looked dull. Playing with the focus whenever one of the assailants enters a room works well as a means of obscuring, as does fading the gruesome family in and out of shots throughout the house. Barker keeps the camera roomy around his subjects to hint that – at any second – another character could appear. The general effect is to transform his human threat into a near-supernatural  omnipresence we never quite get a handle on. Of course all this is somewhat ruined by the dopey revelations that come later.

Dodgy dialogue and a meandering sense of panic eventually bog Torment down in its own lack of creativity, however there’s successful suspense and a few nifty set-pieces to maintain your attention for a fun and forgettable night of home defence.

★★1/2
Scott Clark


11 March 2013

The Tall Man DVD Review

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Back in 2008 French writer/director Pascal Laugier unleashed Martyrs on unsuspecting audiences, casually marketing the film as a horror when in actual fact it was the closest thing I’d seen to a genuine journey into hell. One of those “let’s sit on our own for a while in a nice place and NEVER watch this again” kind of films.  So Laugier’s newest venture (French/Canadian Co-produced) The Tall Man has been something of a pursuit of mine for a while.
In the town of Cold Rock, a dying red-neck tip of ever there was, something is stealing children without a trace. As Julia Denning (Jessica Biel) struggles to fit in as the towns leading medical expert and community pillar, her life is thrown into further turmoil when The Tall Man comes to visit.

The trailer for the film, the general look and feel, and Jessica Biel taking the lead may get your warning bells going like mad, they certainly did for me. In comparison to Martyrs, it just seems a bit too glitzy and that’s down to an entire shift in aesthetic and budget from Martyrs. The story at first glance seems tired and done: who wants another abduction flick? Can we really sit through more monsters in the woods or stalker/slashers with a penchant for kiddies? Thankfully Laugier is totally on the ball, wrapping a thriller in the signs and signifiers of a shameless horror flick. You’ll spend a lot of the film wondering just what the fuck is going on thanks to that conspiracy of genres, but that’s fine, you should expect that from the guy who made Martyrs.  No matter how clever it is though, The Tall Man relies a little too much on the forgetfulness of kids which, by the end, will have you questioning some of the basic principles of the film if you’re not totally distracted by the poignancy of its final note.

Biel is absolutely fantastic proving once and for all she’s a top leading lady and is just as comfortable neck deep in muck, cut and bruised, and losing her shit as she is being composed and commanding. It’s her performance that drives the film, being more of a character piece than you might initially suspect. Jodelle Ferland (Silent Hill) is fast becoming the poster teen for horror, here appearing as a mute daughter of an abusive household. William B. Davis (The Smoking Man from X-Files) pops up as bumbling Sheriff Chestnut, Stephen McHattie (Pontypool) appears as straight-laced FBI agent, and Samantha Ferris shines as Ferland’s struggling mother.
The Tall Man is very different from Martyrs, but that’s good because churning out the same harrowing experience would be detrimental to Laugier’s reputation. Instead he goes in the opposite direction being perhaps a little more obvious with his questioning but still inspiring thought nonetheless.

An intriguing genre hybrid with a startlingly good performance from Biel, The Tall Man is brave and powerful but perhaps a little too blatant in its last act. Nonetheless it’s a watchable, intense, and thought-provoking thriller from an emerging horror talent.

★★★★


Scott Clark


Rating: 15
DVD/BD Release Date: 11th March 2013
Directed By
Cast
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Buy: The Tall Man On Blu-ray / DVD

31 August 2012

'The Tall Man' Trailer

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Back in 2008 French director Pascal Laugier proved just how miserable and degrading horror can be. His grimy psych-horror Martyrs gave a lot of us nightmares and made us pretty happy with the upbringing we had. This year he unleashes his next feature The Tall Man starring Jessica Biel. Anticipation is high and early reviews rave about this chilling drama cum horror…

In a slowly dying mining town, children are vanishing without a trace , allegedly abducted by a mysterious figure known as “The Tall Man.” Town nurse Julia Denning (Biel) seems skeptical until her young son David disappears in the middle of night. Frantic to rescue the boy, Julia lives every parent’s darkest nightmare in this twisting, shock-around-each-corner thriller.