The
following picks include three found-footage oddities and thrillers about a
contagion and a kidnapping that are not what they seem.
‘He’s Watching’اضافة اعلان
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The gods of experimental
horror have been generous this year. First came
the sublimely unsettling “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair.” Now comes this
singular found-footage art film, made during the coronavirus pandemic lockdown
by writer-director-cinematographer Jacob Aaron Estes (“Don’t Let Go”) at his
own home.
The story is told
from the point of view of Iris, a teenager, and her younger brother, Lucas, who
are stuck at their family’s Los Angeles house while their parents are
hospitalized with a malady that’s killing people across the country. (Iris and
Lucas are played by Estes’ children, also named Iris and Lucas.) Mom and Dad
are not responding to Iris’ messages, but somebody is sending her videos that
were shot at night from inside the house — and Lucas is not the messenger. I
will not say more, because to do so would spoil the film’s grotesque joys.
Estes said in the
film’s press notes that he made the movie to ward off boredom while he and his
wife and children were cloistered indoors. But instead of a feel-good family
album, he went full-on macabre, filling his movie with fun-house menace and
formalist madness and calling on his kids to explore predation, despair and
resentment, a task they perform with remarkable assurance. This is bold horror
moviemaking, and it’s one of my favorite scary movies of the year.
Rent or buy it
on most major platforms.
‘Every Single Someone’
Male privilege takes a beating in this 16mm found-footage fever dream from
writer-director Samuel Marko.
In 2017, a camera crew tagged along with a group of
Colorado students for a documentary about college life. Their main subject was
Lee (
Luke Krogmeier), a creative writing student who is having a tough time
after being dumped by his girlfriend. The camera follows Lee as he hangs out
with his buddies and goes on a halfhearted date, but things take a chilling
turn when Lee hires Amos (Luke Towle), a hit man, to kill his ex. The
filmmakers become complicit in the horrors that follow as Lee’s mental state
spirals and he and Amos have a falling out.
Epitomized in a
gruesome scene involving a puppy, a hammer, and a passage from Mozart’s
“Marriage of Figaro,” Marko’s film is a brazen synthesis of violence and
vérité, like a scrappy cross between “A Clockwork Orange” and a Frederick
Wiseman documentary. As the bleakness builds, so does the experimentalism —
under the artful hand of cinematographer Nils Alan Eklund, terror is rendered
in shapes, colors and, ultimately, darkness. It’s rhapsodic.
Stream it on
Amazon.
‘Horror in the High
Desert’
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This documentary explores what happened to Gary Hinge, a young hiker who
was reported missing after he set off into the
Nevada wilderness. Through
interviews with friends and relatives, we learn that Gary was obsessed with
survivalism and had a popular hiking blog.
Gary did not tell
anyone where he was headed the night he disappeared, frustrating the
authorities and the private detective hired by Gary’s sister, Beverly. Things
take a dark turn when police find Gary’s truck with unidentifiable bare
footprints alongside it — strange, since Gary did not drive to the places he
hiked. But then Gary’s backpack surfaces, and so does a mysterious video.
I lied. This is not
a true-crime documentary, it’s something far creepier: a low-budget found-footage
horror movie that’s so realistic it’s uncanny, like an otherworldly episode of
“48 Hours.” Writer-director Dutch Marich and his cast work magic by keeping the
action to a minimum and the acting on a low flame. Watching the film calls for
patience, because Marich reveals what happened to Gary almost entirely through
dialogue, like a campfire ghost story.
That is until a
sadistically directed finale that’s so terrifying, I had to look away from the
screen because I could not handle it. I can’t wait for the sequel later this
year.
Stream it on
Amazon.
‘Eradication’
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As a deadly contagion spreads, David (Harry Aspinwall) remains
isolated in
a beautiful home in the woods. For some reason he has survived, and he hands
over his blood samples to the government in exchange for food — a lifeline
coordinated by his wife, Sam (Anita Abdinezhad), a scientist who is uninfected
and hidden away, charged with keeping David alive in hopes of developing a
vaccine.
But after a
mysterious phone call from a man who says David’s isolation may not be what he
thinks it is, David leaves the house, only to fight off a ravenous zombie — an
encounter that makes him question if trusting the authorities was in his best
interest.
This slow-burn
plague-survival film directed by Daniel Byers, which he co-wrote with
Aspinwall, explores deception and isolation with strategically positioned
twists that will keep you guessing. Ben Heim’s nightmarish score and Alexandra
Gilwit and Zachary Ludescher’s lush cinematography help elevate the film above
other recent Tubi horror originals.
Stream it on
Tubi.
‘No Exit’
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Ignore some of the half-witted dialogue — like “I’m a Marine, you idiot.
It’s what we do.” — and instead enjoy
Damien Power’s film for what it is: a
guess-who, single-location horror-thriller with enough surprises and blood to
be just the right amount of entertaining in 95 minutes.
Darby (Havana Rose
Liu) is in a drug rehab program when she learns that her mother is in the
hospital. Hot-wiring a getaway car, Darby flees the (very minimum security)
facility only to be stymied by treacherously snowy weather. She opts to weather
the storm with four strangers at a rural visitors center with, of course, no
Wi-Fi.
Stepping outside
after meeting the strangers, Darby is startled to see a girl (Mila Harris)
bound and gagged inside a van in the parking lot, leaving her to wonder which
of the people she’s with is a kidnapper. Is it the kindly older couple (Dennis
Haysbert and Dale Dickey)? The pretty-boy jock (Danny Ramirez)? The
greasy-haired weirdo (David Rysdahl)?
The truth —
revealed in a dizzying third-act twist — I did not see coming.
Stream it on Hulu.
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