Alone at Night (2023) by Jimmy Giannopoulos


Director: Jimmy Giannopoulos
Year: 2023
Country: USA
Alternate Titles: 18 & Over
Genre: Slasher

Plot:
After a tumultuous break-up, a woman trying to get over her ex-boyfriend at a remote house in the countryside where she can produce her adult livestream cam-shows by herself begins to feel that an obsessed fan has followed her to the house and begun killing those around her to be with her.

Review:

There’s not much to this one but it does have a few likable factors. One of the main factors here is the general setup that provides plenty of potential while still allowing for some topical storylines. Being by herself while undergoing a quarantine session and engaging in a series of webcam chats with others that alerts a deranged stalker to her location and begins killing those around her cabin serves as a decent setup for what’s going on here involving the gradual reveal of the figure lurking around the cabin as she tries to entertain her career and those who constantly appear around her. The various interactions that take place here while they go through the mind-games as who’s trying to talk with her as the interactions here offer up the kind of intriguing setup for the few stalking scenes featured here providing some shocking ambushes with decent enough gore. These are what manage to make it enjoyable.

There are some big issues to be had here. The main drawback is the generally lackluster pace that never builds up much steam here since so much of what goes on is far removed from the kind of content the setup offers. With so much of the film not focused on the killer appearing but instead on either her watching a lame reality TV show that makes no sense or on strange men appearing at a supposedly remote and hard-to-access cabin in the woods, very little happens to remain interesting here. Since this material isn’t interesting and features a ton of plot holes as well, this would be hard-pressed already before even taking into account the low-level tempo featured here. As this also leaves the killer so obvious it’s not a surprise when it’s revealed or their lame motivation because it never provides a chance to build up anyone else, there’s a slew of big drawbacks here holding this one down.


Overview: */5
A disappointing slasher/thriller that has a few decent aspects, there’s not much here to hold this up as those issues do become quite overwhelming as it goes along. Give this a shot if you’re intrigued by the style here or are curious due to the creative crew while most others out there should heed caution if not outright avoid it.

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