Fang (2022) by Richard Burgin


Director: Richard Burgin
Year: 2022
Country: USA
Alternate Titles: N/A
Genre: Psychological

Plot:
Trying to get through his troubled life, a young man living with his sick mother and a live-in maid comes to believe that an encounter with a rat living in the house is slowly turning him into a rat-like creature, and must keep the secret from others while carrying out his miserable existence.

Review:

This was a somewhat flawed genre effort. Among the better aspects at play here is the genuine sympathy elicited throughout here as this tries to make us care for what's going on. Seeing how his mother's mental and physical decline is occurring right in front of him with the quips and comebacks that manage to be forgotten about seconds later, the living conditions they're in or the overall issues he faces at work all combine together to paint a very endearing portrait of him long before he begins to undergo the psychological breakdown associated with the supposed transformation. Getting this aspect added to the mix only furthers everything established until then by taking the idea of the stress associated with the situation and applying it to the transformation that only ends up furthering his own mental snap. This is all quite fun and really helps to give this some likable factors for the most part.

There are some issues to be had with this one. The biggest drawback to this one comes from the rather over-the-top means this takes to try to showcase his horrible living conditions that aren't rife with cliche upon cliche. Featuring tons of work to build up how his work life is a complete waste with a dead-end mentality and a jerk of a boss, disrespectful co-workers and no shortage of back-talk from his senile mother, this part of the film is incredibly easy to see where it's going and not offer up any kind of surprises which makes it all quite repetitive and frustrating. That carries over into the rest of his home life as dealing with his mother's instabilities and how that all takes a toll on everything around him creates way too much of a dead-end portrait that it becomes unbelievable even before taking the transformation into account.

The unfortunate side-effect of that cliched build-up is the film's other pretty overwhelming issue, in that there's not much in the way of genuine horror going on for a large part of the running time. While running through the cliches of his troubled work and chaotic home lives gives a great sympathetic turn for him just on that basis alone, hardly any of it is terrifying or thrilling which is pretty problematic while waiting for things to get crazy regarding the belief that he's undergoing the physical change. Rather than give us the potential that something he's saying is supposed to be true, we're forced to take his word for it due to the generally underwhelming attempts at injecting a horrific atmosphere into these moments. That also causes the film to run on way too long for its own good and stretch out a running time it didn't need to, all of which drag this one down considerably.


Overview: *.5/5
Problematic for what it is but still has some decent aspects to it, this is a somewhat underwhelming effort that at least has some positives to be had with it. Those who appreciate this kind of indie genre effort or are fine with the psychological concept of this one will be the most appreciative of it while most others out there who aren't a fan of those features or are turned off by the flaws should heed caution.

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