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In2ruders is a dark, sexy and twisted short horror film from award-winning director Naeem Mahmood. What price would you pay for fame, that's the question asked by this intelligent film, about the darker side of the music industry.
Starring the music duo Bloom twins, Caprice, Dr Who's Samuel Anderson with a wonderfully creepy turn from music legend Tony Hadley as a nightmarish lounge singer, In2ruders is a powerful film that is as gripping as it is shocking. Highly stylised with a fantastic dream-like quality that slips in and out of the realms of pure nightmares, In2ruders is a captivating film. Tightly shot and utilising some great editing techniques, the film draws you entirely into the plight of the protagonist. Aiding this immersion in the nightmare world is a disturbing and unsettling times film score from Duran Duran legend Nick Rhodes that matches the events on screen perfectly. Rhodes has composed a score that really gets under your skin and leaves you feeling somewhat disoriented. Caprice's turn as the beguiling villain is a revelation, when she is on screen she commands your attention, with her siren like performance. The Bloom twins also handled themselves very well, they may not have the screen presence of Caprice but they do a bring a sense of fragility to their roles. In2ruders, like all good nightmares, doesn't have a typically linear plot, the events of the film are presented with a sort of fractured timeline, ensuring that the viewer is kept on an uneasy and uneven keel. And like all good nightmares, the film has an effective ambiguous and open-ended finale. If you are looking for an intelligent horror film that isn't your usual run of the mill, then In2ruders is the film for you. It's exploration of Faustain and the struggles that females face while trying to make in the music business themes are cleverly handled and bring something new and unique to this well worn trope. Like the twisted offspring of David Lynch and Black Mirrors In2ruders is a surreal nightmare journey into the dark underbelly of fame.
If you would like to catch In2ruders at the cinema there are two special showings this month. It will be screening as part of Shorts on Tap Halloween Special on 30 october at Regents street Cinema
https://www.regentstreetcinema.com/programme/to-hell-and-back/ And as part of the Unrestricted View Horror Film Festival on 31st October http://londonhorrorsociety.co.uk/lhs-unrestricted-view-horror-film-festival/ FILM REVIEW: IT LIVES INSIDE
3/10/2018
Oh budget, where were you when they needed you most? As we at the Ginger Nuts of Horror deal extensively with low-budget indie movies it’s hardly surprising to get films with slightly rounded corners where a little trimming has been done to keep things affordable. ‘It Lives Inside’ is one of those films which really could have done with a bit more cash invested in the only area which required a bit of a boost… The pretty poor CGI. Not saying that’s the only downside, it’s not even a deal breaker, just that something a little better than the ‘smoke monster’ from ‘LOST’ would have been preferable. I say that the CGI is not the only downside, there’s also the odd muted performance from supporting cast which realistically could have been ramped up a notch, you know what… It doesn’t matter! This is a surprisingly good film, one which would easily stand a second viewing. It’s not an in your face kind of movie and as such it is not going to bombard you with jump scares and loud music, what it is going to do is build tension solidly making you anxious to see just how bad things are going to get for the young couple and their baby who are the focus of the film. The baby’s father is a sleepwalker, he finds a book from which he releases a demonic spirit, yeah, I know, it’s all been done before and hey, I was prepared for a yawnfest too, but I was pleasantly surprised. The father is possessed, but not in any ‘Ashy slashy’ fashion as it’s more a case that he looks quite normal and does his best to fight the urgings of the Demon. This is a normal guy with a no-frills lifestyle who is just trying to protect his family. Is the demon real though or is the buggered-up sleep-pattern making him lose his grip on reality? Thanks to a largely unnecessary intro set in 1890 and showing a Blacksmith at an encampment being possessed by the smoke demon and going bat-shit crazy killing everyone in the camp, it’s all pointing toward the demon being real. Personally the film would have been better without the intro and the money saved on not filming that could have spent on the CGI. Better luck next time eh? It Lives Inside is a very smart film, although it doesn’t blatantly allude toward mental health issues it certainly covers them with great sensitivity albeit in broad strokes necessary to keep the supernatural edge right up until the nasty finale. It is now available on VOD and DVD and is well worth the rental. FILM REVIEW: EUTHANIZER
1/10/2018
This film is the story of mechanic who has a peculiar side-line in mercy killing the sick pets of those who cannot afford vet’s fees. “The small ones get gas, the big ones get a bullet” he states when asked how he does it. Let’s make no mistake, this is dark, unpleasant and very grim material, and yet no matter how antisocial the lead character is I absolutely felt a sort of kinship with him as I also wouldn’t wish to see an animal suffer. For a modest fee he will end their suffering and bury the animal afterwards, it’s not legal but better that than have the animals in pain. Where things go wrong is when he is brought a healthy dog to euthanize for no other reason than it’s a nuisance, so rather than killing the dog he adopts it. This causes a major conflict between him and the dog’s former owner and it is this conflict which propels the film forward to a deadly conclusion. I cannot in all truth say that I enjoyed this film, because it is not set up for enjoyment on the same level a standard horror film would be. It’s more of a film to think about, regarding euthanasia in particular but also the nature of people in general and how they view the animals they are supposed to be caring for. Man’s inhumanity to man (and beast) and all that. Regarding production values, everything spot on, no complaints here and as far as the acting is concerned there are also no complaints as everything is delivered in a perfectly natural way as if it’s more documentary than a film, which if anything makes it even more unsettling. The main character is far from sympathetic and is beautifully portrayed; it’s a solid performance which is a delicate balancing act between finding him to be a miserable old sod whilst his empathy for animals is touching. Although there is the primary conflict between the euthaniser and the dog owner, that isn’t the whole of the story, as he develops an unhealthy relationship with a somewhat quirky woman who appears to be more a lost soul than he is, which doesn’t end well for either of them. It’s a film with no charm, no truly likeable characters, absolutely no sense of redemption and as stated previously not enjoyable. However, it is dramatic and at times horrific and although not a traditional horror by any standard I would state it is certainly worth watching. It seems wholly contradictory to say it’s not enjoyable but to go ahead and recommend it, but I believe that if you do choose to watch it you’ll get exactly what I mean. It’s available now on home video. FILM REVIEW: THE LULLABY
25/9/2018
BY JOE X YOUNGLullaby. A film which doesn’t need one.
1901, Reitfontein concentration camp, a baby is murdered, its neck is broken and it is thrown off a cliff. In a voiceover… “If one of us fell pregnant, the Priest and the Midwife would make certain that the baby would never see a sunrise” The scene is of white people in clean clothes holding back the mother whilst the Priest gives the usual bullshit about sin, and then the baby gets killed and dumped. I’m surprised that they chose that to begin a film with as at the Reitfontein Camp the death of children was a daily thing with many months seeing child mortality rates in the hundreds, sometimes going into thousands. Disease, malnutrition, exposure, lack of medical care and various other causes resulted in around a third of the population dying, with children representing 81% of the deaths at the ‘Black camps’. There’s enough horror there without having to invent any. Cut to modern day, a delivery room and a woman in labour. Chloe (Reine Swart) has the baby and rejects it. Her estranged mom Ruby (Thandi Puren) takes charge in spite of being pissed off that her daughter won’t say who the father is, and is seemingly incapable of doing even the most basic things new mothers should do such as clipping the baby’s nails, using a breast milk pump et cetera. She is (and looks) totally exhausted because the baby never stops crying. It’s all stuff we’ve seen before a dozen times, and there’s actually nothing new to see here. I think a big warning regarding this film is that it comes from the same director as ‘Dracula 3000’, so yeah, it ain’t good. The acting is good, never quite good enough to elevate the mundane plot, but certainly not among the worst. It does give a bunch of scares, however they are mostly jump-scares and I’m probably not alone in thinking that they are generally present at the expense of actual proper scares which require a depth to them that this film fails to adequately convey. Think back to the beginning, and to an actual horror which really happened. Surely with Reitfontein as the basis for the fictitious intro there could have been such a lot of ties to it throughout, but there wasn’t. No ‘angry spirits rising en-masse’, just a bunch of hallucinations about an evil old woman who wants Chloe to kill the baby. The Lullaby isn’t dire. It’s watchable, but it is nothing new. Currently available as VOD. HORROR FILM REVIEW: STILL/BORN
20/9/2018
by joe x young
There are many films covering the cliché of spooky goings-on mixed with postpartum depression and Still/Born does little to push any boundaries. It’s a routine tale of Mary (Christie Burke) who is pregnant with twins but loses one during childbirth. Her depression supposedly manifests in the form of a Demon and the film hangs heavily on Mary’s anxiety over potentially losing the surviving child, which to pile on the clichés is called ‘Adam’. Another cliché is the somewhat witless husband Jack (Jesse Moss) who comes across as being as useful as a chocolate fireguard.
I don’t know if it’s my testosterone levels interfering with my enjoyment here but I just don’t find this sort of film to be delivering the goods to any great degree and I think it’s probably the case that I’m not the intended audience for this film. However, horror is horror and as such it should be effective no matter who is watching it, in this case it is lacking the fundamental ability to grip my interest. The audio-visual ‘hallucinations’ that Mary has are meant to be disturbing, but mostly are just contrived jump-scares which don’t do anything for me these days as I’ve seen too many of them to be impressed and would much prefer some actual atmosphere. This is not to say that there’s no atmosphere in this film, just that what there is of it is lumbering and isn’t served well by yet another ‘demon’ which looks like a grotty mental patient with all of the jerkiness used to better effect in the ‘Judderman’ Metz commercials which were far scarier than this film. Mary is a believable character, with Christie Burke giving a solid performance which through the fluctuations of the plot shows enough versatility, it’s just a shame that her obvious acting talent is wasted on such a pedestrian film. It’s a grind, nothing much happens in the first half of the film, with the possibility of something demonic going on only happening toward the half-way stage with a broken window and a demonic voice (Am I the only one who is tired of ‘demonic voices’ sounding like Gollum with a forty-a-day smoking habit?). There are no real noteworthy performances other than Christie’s with the possible exception of Michael Ironside’s brief appearances as Mary’s therapist, he’s always good value no matter what and is grossly underused in this. There’s a minimalistic stab at atmosphere here, and it all seems so damned familiar. The technical aspects are fine, sound and lighting add to the mood as it would be expected but there are certain aspects which are truly annoying, such as the reliance on a crying baby for creepy atmosphere and of course the aforementioned rasping ‘Demon’ voice. Baby monitors, webcams and sticking doors are used to assist with the delivery of tension which again doesn’t quite work as it’s all been done before and often better, and of course the cameras showing a totally different take on what actually happened, which is all anti-climactic in a horror story. The last fifteen minutes unravel in plot and in Mary’s sanity; it’s all a bit of a mess of improbable scenarios leading to an ending which is meant to be terrifying but just comes across as preposterous. If you have seen ‘The Babadook’ or ‘Mama’ then you have seen films which are much better than Still/Born and if you really want to see something along this line but much better then seek out the original ‘Rosemary’s Baby’. HORROR NEWS: FRIGHTFEST PRESENTS THE DARK ON DVD AND DIGITAL 22 OCT
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