The late 70s. A young couple working for French TV, reporter Melissa (Gala
Besson) and cameraman David (Fabrice Pierre) – the film having rightly concluded
that waving away the soundman typical for this set-up with a comment about a
new-fangled camera with integrated sound gets rid of an unneeded character –
come to a town at the French-Swiss border to report on a group of scientists
investigating a local bout of cattle mutilation and cattle disappearances.
However, all contact to the scientists’ base on top of a rather inhospitable
mountain has broken off a few days ago. Supposedly, there’s nothing to worry
about (there is after all nothing dangerous on the mountain, right?). Probably,
the radio’s just broken down because of the cold. Nobody really wants to wait
for the next supply helicopter run to be sure, though, so Melissa and David are
allowed the grand opportunity of a couple of days hiking up a frozen mountain
for their interviews, accompanying a local guide, a US cop with his own interest
in cattle mutilations (Doug Rand) and a biologist (Maura Tillay). Needless to
say, things do not go well on their journey, and the material we see are the
digitally cleaned remains of the footage found decades later.
For, yes, Fabien Delage’s Cold Ground is yet another found footage
movie/POV horror film containing the last testament of some poor, doomed people.
Note to self: never take a camera anywhere, and you will live longer.
Even though the film – unlike Delage’s earlier fake documentary La Rage du Démon - never quite leaves the traditional
structures of the POV horror genre behind, it is, however, a worthwhile entry
into it, presenting at least a couple of ideas of its own but predominantly
recommending itself by going through some of the standard tropes in a thoughtful
and convincing manner. Where quite a few POV horror films never really feel as
if they have a professionally edited script to work from, Delage actually puts
some more than decent work into things like pacing, as well as actually writing
characters. These characters aren’t particularly deep, but the writing is deft
enough to give the cast something to work with, in turn providing the audience
with a stake in their (horrible) fate. And while we generally know how all of
this ends, the film does put a lot of effort into getting there in ways that do
go from one interesting, even exciting, incident to the next. One might think
that’s the sort of thing every genre film aiming to grab its audience would do,
but one would be terribly, fatally wrong.
I also found myself rather enjoying how Delage uses and plays with various
classical Fortean tropes until the film finally reveals what kind of monster is
actually going to murder its poor characters horribly. And yes, we do get a good
look or three at the film’s monster, never so good a look that there’s any need
to criticize design or effects quality, but enough we get a fine idea of what
these things look like.
Cold Ground is a bit gorier than most POV horror films, too, clearly
realizing that taking place in 1976 also puts a certain onus of mild ickiness on
a film. It’s not gratuitous, mind you, rather the slightly unappetizing are
there as often and as much as is needed for what the film is doing.
Speaking of 1976, the film’s fake 70s documentary look is very well realized
too, the whole thing looking a lot like actual documentaries shot under
difficult circumstances of its time. This is part of the film’s general air of
veracity, where the international characters speak with the appropriate accents,
wear the right fashions and haircuts, as well as have tastes in music which
fit.
So, even though this is probably not going to shock those among my imaginary
readers who just loathe all POV horror films into changing their minds, Cold
Ground is a worthwhile film for those among us who do like the sub-genre or
just well-made small horror movies.
Sunday, February 24, 2019
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