Return to Cabin by the Lake (2001): Because apparently
nobody in the early 00’s could get enough of Judd Nelson mugging idiotically
through a nonsense plot that tries to excuse its stupidity by calling itself a
comedy, the world suffered this sequel to Po-Chih Leong’s TV movie Cabin by
the Lake. The film’s still plotted for an audience of fools, the jokes are
the sort of smug “ain’t Hollywood horrible” jokes that must have had a beard in
the 1930s already, and Nelson’s performance as serial
killer/screenwriter/director is so broad, no bridge could cross it. Though you
gotta give some respect to screenwriter Jeffrey Reddick when an early,
completely insufferable, victim of Nelson’s Stanley goes by his own name; I
accept the apology.
The Droving (2020): This piece of British indie folk horror
about a soldier/torturer (Daniel Oldroyd) searching for the killer of his sister
(Amy Tyger) as directed by George Popov is fortunately not trying to be funny.
It’s a bit of a frustrating film, though, the sort of affair that’s clearly made
with talent and love but doesn’t come together quite well enough. The film
certainly has an eye for moody (and pretty) landscape shots very useful for folk
horror, and its script has a clear idea of the intersection between its
folkloric idea and the inner life of its main character. The acting’s good too.
The problem is the pacing: scenes, as is so often the case in indie
productions, tend to go on longer than they should be – sometimes clearly aiming
for suspense but not quite being able to sustain it long enough, other times
going slightly overboard with an attempt to deepen the character and his
flashback relation to his sister. Of course, these are the kinds of flaws that
come from a willingness to take risks and show the right kind of ambition, so
it’s difficult to be too unhappy with the film.
She Never Died (2019): Speaking of indie movies with
ambition, Audrey Cummings’s peculiar mix of grungy proto-superhero elements and
horror, with a smidgen of 80s buddy comedy certainly is that, also. Canadian and
city-based, this also shows an understanding of creating mood via landscape, or
rather cityscape. Otherwise, there’s little connecting it with any of the other
films in this post. It’s one of those films that have a peculiar and personal
vibe, as if you were watching someone’s very individual favourite bits of
different genres put together to form one movie. As is typical for this sort of
affair, this isn’t always as effective as it could be on a dramatic level, but
still features nice effects, fun performances by lead Olunike Adeliyi as our
superpowered cannibal heroine with a secret and various Canadian character
actors like Peter MacNeill and Noah Denby, and a visible love for the city as
the true place to set one’s grubby vigilantism in.
The only truly off-putting element here is the sudden excursion into the
biblical in the final ten minutes or so, promising a sequel I suspect will never
come instead of finishing the film properly.
Saturday, June 13, 2020
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