Flowing (2022) by Paolo Strippoli ***BHFF 2022***


Director: Paolo Strippoli
Year: 2022
Country: Italy/Belgium
Alternate Titles: Piove; Rain
Genre: Supernatural Slasher

Plot:
In the midst of strange outbreaks, a father-and-son team of sewer cleaners discovers the phenomenon that rainfall activates a mysterious fog from the city sewers and causes those to inhale it to act out their darkest impulses and become concerned when his family becomes a part of the occurrences.

Review:

There was quite a lot to like here. Among the better features in play here is the series of impressive storylines at play here that come together into a fun setup. The initial family tragedy involving the father trying to keep his family together after what happened with his wife, the outbursts of his son who’s becoming a reckless troublemaker doing anything he wants with no semblance of authority reigning him in, and a daughter trying to come to terms with the accident due to her now-handicapped condition, comes together quite well in generating a solid baseline of storylines to get this one going. When added together with the setup about the strange fog from the sewers as the potential culprit not just behind his actions but several other scenarios around the city give this a lot to like.

That allows the film to hit quite hard in the second half when the build-up about his son’s antics has reached a fever point and his life spirals out of control. As the initial theory about the poison gas from the sewers starts to emerge and the action around the city grows in response, the frantic outbursts of violence here become increasingly more graphic and brutal with the discovery of their neighbors and the son’s encounter with the maniacal security he had previously tormented setting the stage for this one quite nicely. That all manages to bring the hard-hitting finale into a fantastic brawl with the storyline points getting utilized rather well and the pay-offs for several of the established storylines get brought out resulting in some brutal action and gore to go along with everything here to have a lot to like.


This one does have some pretty big drawbacks to it. The main detriment here is the outright bland pacing that goes on for so much of the film dealing with the dramatic tension within its storylines rather than doling out genre shocks. The setup of the strange fog in the sewers making everyone go crazy is explored in brief momenta and seems to be elements that exist around the central drama of the family falling apart rather than heightening the situation using those elements. Half the time, the drama doesn’t even feel earned due to an utterly moronic situation-making influenced by the fog that should’ve clued someone in that they’re acting off but doesn’t have the same impact since the unaffected should still be able to tell. This all means the first half a bit sluggish to get going.

The other issue here is that the fog itself doesn’t really serve up much in the way of explanations for what’s going on. The act itself is serviceable and threatening but the idea of taking such a common-use occurrence like fog emerging from the sewers to be the catalyst for everything out of the blue like it is without any reason or enhancement strikes as lazy. Without offering the why and how of it happening now, even in the context of a brief bit about exploring long-buried sections of the city in the background of something to plant the idea of it always being there but has just now found a way to impact the population would’ve worked. As it stands, it just looks like a rather weak metaphor for teenage rebellion against his father or loneliness for his wife which is underwhelming enough and lowers this overall.


Overview: ***.5/5
A generally effective and brutal if slightly flawed effort, this one gets quite a lot to like about it even though the flaws here do manage to bring it down from what it could’ve been. Give this a look if you’re intrigued by the concept or appreciate this kind of approach while those that don’t enjoy these factors should heed caution.

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