Review by Stephanie Scaife
Warning: Contains moderate spoilers.
Admittedly I was a bit late to the game when it came to The Cabin in the Woods. I’d been intrigued by the posters I’d seen and had heard rumblings of greatness, not least from Britt Hayes who provided a glowing review after the SXSW screening earlier this year (read that here). But then that thing happened where something becomes so overhyped that I just became… sort of over it. Like when everyone was reading The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, it took me over a year to pick up a copy purely because I was so sick of seeing everyone else read it and then tell me how good it was. But then I found myself stuck for ideas of how to amuse myself on a grey and rainy Scottish Spring day whilst visiting my grandmother, so I suggested going to the cinema. She wanted to see Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, I wanted to see Lockout but somehow the compromise ended up being The Cabin in the Woods.
Luckily I’d managed to avoid any of the major plot spoilers, and the film definitely works better if you go in blind so I won’t spoil the ending, but as it’s been out for a few weeks now I think it’s safe to assume that we all know the basics. Essentially The Cabin in the Woods is a smart ass play on the conventions of the horror genre, and it works to a certain extent. But it definitely thinks it’s cleverer than it actually is and it will only really play to a fanboy audience who already know the ins and outs of the genre, meaning that unfortunately much is likely to be lost on your average cinemagoer who will not understand the in-jokes and knowing nods and winks.
The film starts with Sitterson (Richard Jenkins) and Hadley (Bradley Whitford), two white collar workers shooting the shit by the coffee machine. But what do they do and where do they work? That is the question that is gradually revealed throughout the course of the movie. We then cut to an altogether more familiar opening where we see our five protagonists, all of whom fit their designated stereotype; we have the jock Curt (Chris Hemsworth), his slutty girlfriend Jules (Anna Hutchison), the girl-next-door Dana (Kristen Connolly), the smart sensitive Holden (Jesse Williams) and finally our stoner comedy relief in the form of Marty (Fran Kranz in a scene stealing role). They are setting off on a weekend getaway to stay at Curt’s cousin’s cabin in the woods, but what’s that? There’s a man on the roof of the apartment monitoring their every move and he’s reporting in to none other than Sitterson and Hadley, the duo we were introduced to at the very beginning. Less than 5 minutes in and we already know that something is amiss here. This isn’t your typical slasher film. Even the creepy, drooling redneck at the gas station they pass through is in on it.
Basically this is kind of like Marc Evans’s My Little Eye (underappreciated, in my opinion) meets The Truman Show with a slight hint of Funny Games thrown in for good measure, and the audience is in on it right from the start. The question is; how long will it take our protagonists to cotton on? Sitterson and Hadley are the puppeteers in this scenario and although the free will of the characters comes into play during certain key moments, as soon as things don’t go to plan our guys step in to ensure that the criteria is met (pheromone infused mist to ensure a sex scene, for example). The idea is that the characters are being manipulated into acting in a certain way to meet the audience expectations, it’s clever and it toys with the audience’s knowledge of the genre and raises those all-important questions about why we choose to watch horror films and violence on screen for entertainment. Although it doesn’t so much dwell on the question so much as have fun playing with the answers.
So why is all of this happening? I won’t spoil it for those not in the know, but for me the answer we’re given wasn’t really the payoff I’d wanted or expected. Maybe it just comes down to personal taste, but I’d wanted something altogether more cynical and what I got was something that was actually just sort of silly. It felt to me like Goddard and Whedon had started out with something pretty interesting but had simply made it all up as they went along, going along with every whim, which is rewarding in the sense that the film is amusing; they clearly understand the genre and had a whole lot of fun messing around with it. But the end result contains some rather gaping plot holes and an unsatisfactory and somewhat flimsy explanation that definitely felt sort of thrown together and tacked on almost as an afterthought. It also seemed to me that they were so caught up in cramming as much in as possible that they plain forgot to make anything about the film even remotely scary.
Had my expectations not been so high then perhaps I wouldn’t have dwelt so much on the shortcomings of the film, because – don’t get me wrong – I did enjoy it, and it always makes a nice change to see a horror film that isn’t a remake, terribly predictable or just plain awful. As a fan of the genre I always appreciate the effort to do something different (and the death-by-unicorn scene was not something I could ever have predicted!) Alas, despite some clever moments, snappy dialogue and a few decent set pieces I just didn’t think Cabin in the Woods entirely lived up to the hype. It’s a solid effort that may improve after multiple viewings but for now I’m going to say that for me it was a straight up middle of the road 3 star movie. The verdict of my 71 year old grandmother however, “It was the stupidest and goriest film I’ve ever seen”. I probably should’ve taken her to see Salmon Fishing in the Yemen after all…
Review by Keri O’Shea
It would be disingenuous of me, I reckon, if I went any further without mentioning a certain other British movie which came out quite recently, and which shares a few similarities with The Devil’s Business. Yes, I am of course talking about Kill List, made in the same year and the same country – in which two other hitmen find themselves taking on a job which throws them into sinister circumstances they can’t control and definitely don’t understand. I can only say that I don’t know at all which of these films was written first, or if either screenplay was known to the other filmmaking team prior to shooting, and there’s no point in guessing, but I’ll say this: it must be bloody teeth-grindingly annoying to develop a screenplay, only to see something notably similar come out at more or less the same time. However, if it so happens that Devil’s Business director/writer Sean Hogan was pipped to the post by the appearance of indie sensation Kill List, he can feel satisfied that his movie surpasses Kill List, for this humble reviewer at least. The reason for this is that The Devil’s Business feels like more of a whole movie, where I felt that Kill List comprised two movies linked together rather weakly; there’s a workable back-story in The Devil’s Business, and the presence of the occult elements here feel enmeshed in the plot from the start. It doesn’t blandly spell everything out, it retains elements of mystery (occult means ‘concealed’, after all) but it felt like one consistent narrative.
Review by Keri O’Shea

Break is a backwoods thriller in which four holidaying friends are preyed upon by a couple of rapey, murderous local hillbillies. Combine everything you know about this genre and that’s what happens in Break. It is an entirely by the numbers horror film that is so predictable that what you’re currently imagining in your head is so close to what actually happens that you really just don’t need to watch this film at all.
Review by Keri O’Shea
Tape 407 is a found footage movie where the characters ask this very question, and it’s a film which suffers from many of the pitfalls discussed above. Before I’d started to weigh this up, though, the film’s opening premise – of an excitable pre-teen girl, filming every character boarding the flight on which she’s travelling whilst greeting them in the most saccharine ways imaginable – was a fairly effective piece of horror. If I was on a flight like that, I’d be dipping into my hip-flask full of gin before the ‘fasten seatbelt’ light was on. Hell, the whole plane thing is a horror anyway – but I digress. It’s New Year’s Eve, and excitable pre-teen Trish (Abigail Schrader) and her big sister Jessie (Samantha Lester) are on their way home from New York to Los Angeles after a Christmas break. The two girls, and a selection of other travellers including: a veteran wartime photojournalist, a boozy, bald-headed liability, a woman with medical training, a highly professional air hostess and One Spare Brave Dude, have just been invited to celebrate the New Year during the flight (with complementary glittery hats and beads – Ryanair, this ain’t) when the plane hits some bad turbulence. It’s serious, and – with Trish still filming – the plane crashes, leaving those who survive (i.e. pretty much everyone who’s had any dialogue) to contend with something far worse. Something seems to be out there…
Review by Ben Bussey
From the premise it might sound like an Argento film that never was – somewhere between the incoherent excesses of Phenomena and Opera – but Cassadaga isn’t quite so flashy and over-stylised as it might have been in old Dario’s hands. Director Anthony DiBlasi is going for something a bit more understated here, with an emphasis on tension and atmosphere, and to a degree, Cassadaga is successful in this, but on the whole it never quite grips the viewer as well as it hopes to. Make no mistake, though; as a product of the generally lacklustre After Dark Originals line, Cassadaga is most definitely a cut above the rest. In contrast with the likes of
Review by Nia Edwards-Behi
Elfie Hopkins might best be described as quirky. At its core, this is a film about an outcast trying to find her place in the world. A traumatic past means she holds people at bay, even the few friends she has. Hardly an original core to a film, but there is a great deal to be said for Jaime Winstone’s impressive turn as Elfie. Elfie’s the sort of waster that, in real life, would annoy the living daylights out of me. Superficially, she has a bad attitude, a lack of sensible motivation and doesn’t care who she irritates to get her own way. However, Winstone imbues Elfie with an inherent vulnerability that is clear even without the script’s more literal moments that spell out her trauma for the viewer.
Review by Ben Bussey
As should be evident from that synopsis, the star of the show here is very much Pan Am actress Karine Vanasse’s female fugitive, but as she’s considerably less famous here in the UK than former football player Eric Cantona, he takes centre stage in the extremely prosaic and misleading cover art, suggesting he’s about to join fellow ex-footballer Vinnie Jones in the realm of straight-to-DVD action film. However, while Cantona may be famed for his flying ninja kick skills (even someone as apathetic about football as I am remembers that incident), Switch is certainly not an all-kicking, all-punching, guns-and-ammo brawler. Instead, it’s one of those slow-burn Euro mystery thrillers which have grown ever more popular since those books and films about that girl with some tattoo or other who kicks hornet’s nests whilst playing with fire or something. Indeed, despite having an original screenplay, you’d be forgiven for thinking Switch was based on another of those airport novels. It’s got the requisite twisty-turny plot, location hopping action, and plentiful scenes of cops solemnly pacing back and forth talking over the evidence.
And if that makes this film sound like Cheech and Chong/Jay and Silent Bob/Harold and Kumar meets Night of the Living Dead/The Evil Dead/Braindead (or Dead Alive for the benefit of my American friends)…? Well, that’s not exactly an accident. As to whether Bong of the Dead is as much fun as any of those films; well…
A degree of respite is offered with the introduction of a third protagonist midway, namely Simone Bailly’s tough girl loner Leah. Unfortunately, this character quickly turns out to be as much of a two-dimensional cliché as her male counterparts, bonding with them in an utterly unconvincing fashion simply because it serves to move the story forward. Credit where it’s due, though; Bailly, Wynn and Harris are certainly better actors than tend to be cast in microbudget horror movies, but they just don’t have the chemistry they need to make the film engaging. This is all the more unfortunate as they’re on screen for pretty much the duration of the running time, which incidentally is at least twenty minutes longer than it should be. Sure, there are a few decent zombie attack sequences, particularly the agreeably OTT shoot-‘em-up/chop-‘em-up finale, but for the bulk of the film it’s simply these three actors exchanging dialogue, much of which is either spectacularly unfunny stoner jokes, or painfully over-familiar philosophical musings on the zombie apocalypse. If all this could have been pared back, Bong of the Dead might have been a perfectly passable midnight movie. As it stands, it’s overlong, repetitive and excessively self-indulgent.
Review by Keri O’Shea
Takashi is an adept filmmaker, and so comfortable is he with his job that he can disrupt the pace and tension for break-out interludes – such as the arrival of a bunch of yakuza on Suzuran campus, who begin hassling and intimidating the boys, before pausing to decide on who is going on a run to the shops. This, but of course, is of no detriment to the film whatsoever, whereas in some hands that would feel too self-aware, too uncomfortable. The impression I got was of a director with the utmost confidence in his abilities. The shifts from ultraviolence to humour (which is often physical) to, and I mean this sincerely – pathos, are cool and organic. Whilst Crows Zero is a much more linear and accessible film than the most outlandish of Takashi Miike’s movies, by the end of the film we can see that it still manages to juggle three separate strands of story occurring in different places, bringing them together satisfactorily and neatly.
Review by Keri O’Shea
What follows for Gu-nam is a journey. Not a journey of the type which documentary filmmakers like – where self-knowledge makes someone a better person, or where one’s outlook on life is improved; instead, The Yellow Sea grinds an already unhappy man to ashes as he tries desperately to make sense of the wider picture he finds himself in – a world of organised crime, rival gangs and ulterior motives. It isn’t just a journey, it’s a pursuit. If that all sounds boringly familiar and rather too similar to the reams of crime thrillers we already have, then I can assure you, the tone and style of this film stands alone.