Powerful documentary brings us closer to the truth behind Kurt Cobain than ever before.
Film Review: Kingsman The Secret Service – 7.5/10
Colin Firth plays tinker, tailor, soldier and spy as Matthew Vaughn continues his hot streak…
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Film Review: Calvary – 8/10
Brendan Gleeson gives a career best performance in a little film with big ideas…
Film Review: Stand By Me – 10/10
‘I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve…’
Continue reading “Film Review: Stand By Me – 10/10”Film Review: The Nightmare – 7/10
The terrifying world of sleep paralysis brought to life.
Film Review: Jurassic World – 8.5/10
A director with one low budget indie film to his name brings us the best summer blockbuster since Avengers.
Film Review: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles – 3/10
Producer Michael Bay and director Jonathan Liebesman continue to flog dead horses whilst ruining people’s childhoods.
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Film Review: Kung Fury – 7/10
Taking on the unenviable task of making ’80s cop movies seem more ridiculous than they already are…
Film Review: American Sniper – 7.5/10
He might shout at empty chairs once in a while but Clint Eastwood knows how to tell a story…
Film Review: A Horrible Way To Die – 7/10
Super bleak but powerful horror…
Far away from the seemingly endless stream of found footage movies and ghost stories currently stinking up theatre screens there is an impressive slew of underground horror directors slowly building momentum. Along with Ti West, A Horrible Way to Diedirector Adam Wingard is at the forefront of this scene following his success with You’re Next and his involvement with both the V/H/S and The ABCs of Death chronicles.
A Horrible Way to Die is an arty but brutal ‘what if?’ story in this case posing the question ‘what if your boyfriend is a serial killer?’. This question is a powerful one as it causes fear and uncertainty to breed in the one place that it never should – in your own home and in the arms of your loved one.
While not particularly high concept the constant extreme close ups and chilling choral score make for a unique and memorable viewing experience. This helps to frame three really top class performances with The Sacrament’s AJ Bowen and Joe Swanberg acting as the perfect foil to Amy Seimetz tragic heroine. Bowen in particular is superb as convicted killer Garrick Turrell and a more cynical director could have made a horror franchise off the back of this performance but it is clear with Wingard as with West that the project is more important than the pay check and this is something to be lauded now more than ever.
A Horrible Way to Die is not revolutionary but it is a further example of the direction that horror films should definitely be going. Wingard’s next move will be to remake much loved and critically acclaimed South Korean horror flick I Saw the Devil… No pressure then.