3 reviews
- Scarecrow-88
- Aug 23, 2016
- Permalink
Five short films based on the idea of being in different states of fear.
The Good Stor(ies)-Tick Warning: Agreeing to head into the woods for a special ceremony, a woman and her boyfriend stop off at a secluded beach to rest for a while before continuing. Slowly being inundated by strange dreams and hallucinations, they come to realize a deadly force is present on the beach. This is quite an effective entry that works quite well by being the most explicit about facing an outside evil onto it's victims as the supernatural killer forces a slew of hallucinations that are quite chilling. As it leads into the rather brutal and bloody deaths by slicing themselves open quite graphically providing this one with the only real gore, it's done in like a true slasher film which causes this one to get an extra layer of intensity and suspense by showcasing the build-up to those elements quite well. It still makes no mention of the killer hiding there by the lake or what he really is doing there, but these are easily avoidable.
The Bad Stor(ies)-Sandy: Taking his mistress to the desert, a man disposes of her and returns home to his wife. When he suddenly starts seeing her body around the house, he starts to believe she's really not dead. There's barely anything to like about this one. The fact that it's only ten minutes long is the biggest factor as it doesn't really get much of a chance of doing anything really creepy or chilling, not that the utterly cliché plot would've done anything good with extra time. This is so note-for-note expectable that there's not even the twist of doing anything new or unexpected as a twist, it just follows the same route seen numerous times over in a brief running time which makes this question not only why it was included but even filmed in the first place.
The Trouble with Dad: After displaying signs of dementia, a woman and her husband begin to worry about her father staying alone in his old house. After finding clues that his deteriorating mental state might not be what he figured, he sets out to right the wrong in his life. There's a fairly creepy storyline in this one that really could've made this one quite enjoyable but as it stands this entry doesn't utilize that at all. The central idea about how the onset of his condition is affecting his daily life and routine could've been something big here but instead this one tends to dwell more on how bland and uneventful that really is with nothing coming off in any real interesting facet. There's not a lot of excitement generated from seeing him forget to turn the stove off, forget who his wife was or just simply rot around the house not accomplishing anything despite how the final twist plays out, which doesn't really make much sense anyway.
Ghost Daughter: Stuck at home following a brutal rape, a woman pleads with her mother to forgo her planned revenge on her attacker which falls on deaf ears. As he stays locked in their house while they continually argue about their relationship, a desperate escape attempt comes between them and forces a different reality to take shape. Frankly, this is the one in the film that really struggles with what it wants to be. The fact that there's so many nods for the family drama here between the two and how they really feel towards each other is hardly appropriate in a horror film due to the complete and utter lack of scares present in this kind of film. The late switch into the revenge angle doesn't come fast enough or move seamlessly into the rest of the story, as it's really just confined to one lone sequence late in the segment that brings about no gore or any sort of intense thrill here which is really could've had. All told, this is quite boring with too little, too late.
The Caregiver: Learning of his infidelity, a wife's plans to get revenge fall into place when a lucky stroke leaves her husband paralyzed and in her care. Toying and tormenting him as part of the revenge plan, a suddenly-burgeoning display for telekinesis may disrupt her plans. This one really could've been great but manages to make the lone mistake apparent here in really failing to develop where the powers come from since the whole thing is done from her vantage point. Without any sort of internal dialogue on his part to explain what's going on as the horror of what's going on slowly begins to develop, the instances of him playing with this power are just quite lame and come off as mere coincidences that really don't offer much in terms of suspense or chills at what's going on. As well, it's not really all that horrific what happens anyway and none of this is in any way scary or suspenseful, even the final twist which is quite obvious and never really comes off as a shock. Another great idea marred by lame plotting.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Language.
The Good Stor(ies)-Tick Warning: Agreeing to head into the woods for a special ceremony, a woman and her boyfriend stop off at a secluded beach to rest for a while before continuing. Slowly being inundated by strange dreams and hallucinations, they come to realize a deadly force is present on the beach. This is quite an effective entry that works quite well by being the most explicit about facing an outside evil onto it's victims as the supernatural killer forces a slew of hallucinations that are quite chilling. As it leads into the rather brutal and bloody deaths by slicing themselves open quite graphically providing this one with the only real gore, it's done in like a true slasher film which causes this one to get an extra layer of intensity and suspense by showcasing the build-up to those elements quite well. It still makes no mention of the killer hiding there by the lake or what he really is doing there, but these are easily avoidable.
The Bad Stor(ies)-Sandy: Taking his mistress to the desert, a man disposes of her and returns home to his wife. When he suddenly starts seeing her body around the house, he starts to believe she's really not dead. There's barely anything to like about this one. The fact that it's only ten minutes long is the biggest factor as it doesn't really get much of a chance of doing anything really creepy or chilling, not that the utterly cliché plot would've done anything good with extra time. This is so note-for-note expectable that there's not even the twist of doing anything new or unexpected as a twist, it just follows the same route seen numerous times over in a brief running time which makes this question not only why it was included but even filmed in the first place.
The Trouble with Dad: After displaying signs of dementia, a woman and her husband begin to worry about her father staying alone in his old house. After finding clues that his deteriorating mental state might not be what he figured, he sets out to right the wrong in his life. There's a fairly creepy storyline in this one that really could've made this one quite enjoyable but as it stands this entry doesn't utilize that at all. The central idea about how the onset of his condition is affecting his daily life and routine could've been something big here but instead this one tends to dwell more on how bland and uneventful that really is with nothing coming off in any real interesting facet. There's not a lot of excitement generated from seeing him forget to turn the stove off, forget who his wife was or just simply rot around the house not accomplishing anything despite how the final twist plays out, which doesn't really make much sense anyway.
Ghost Daughter: Stuck at home following a brutal rape, a woman pleads with her mother to forgo her planned revenge on her attacker which falls on deaf ears. As he stays locked in their house while they continually argue about their relationship, a desperate escape attempt comes between them and forces a different reality to take shape. Frankly, this is the one in the film that really struggles with what it wants to be. The fact that there's so many nods for the family drama here between the two and how they really feel towards each other is hardly appropriate in a horror film due to the complete and utter lack of scares present in this kind of film. The late switch into the revenge angle doesn't come fast enough or move seamlessly into the rest of the story, as it's really just confined to one lone sequence late in the segment that brings about no gore or any sort of intense thrill here which is really could've had. All told, this is quite boring with too little, too late.
The Caregiver: Learning of his infidelity, a wife's plans to get revenge fall into place when a lucky stroke leaves her husband paralyzed and in her care. Toying and tormenting him as part of the revenge plan, a suddenly-burgeoning display for telekinesis may disrupt her plans. This one really could've been great but manages to make the lone mistake apparent here in really failing to develop where the powers come from since the whole thing is done from her vantage point. Without any sort of internal dialogue on his part to explain what's going on as the horror of what's going on slowly begins to develop, the instances of him playing with this power are just quite lame and come off as mere coincidences that really don't offer much in terms of suspense or chills at what's going on. As well, it's not really all that horrific what happens anyway and none of this is in any way scary or suspenseful, even the final twist which is quite obvious and never really comes off as a shock. Another great idea marred by lame plotting.
Rated Unrated/R: Graphic Violence and Language.
- kannibalcorpsegrinder
- Aug 4, 2014
- Permalink
Great that the network enabled these up amd coming filmmakers to take a shot woth small budgets. Would like to see more of this from Hollywood in general. Tick Warning -- by far the stand out in the collection.
- Dan-Production
- Dec 26, 2018
- Permalink