Director: Jack Peter Mundy
Year: 2021
Country: United Kingdom
Alternate Titles: Amityville Cornfield; Scarecrow's Camp
Genre: Scarecrow Slasher
Plot:
Arriving at a remote summer camp, a family hoping to reconcile over the loss of their mother by taking over the camp for themselves are soon inundated by the belief that a killer scarecrow is responsible for a slew of disappearances in the area which is proved true forcing them to work together to stop it.
Review:
Overall, this was a pretty solid and fun genre effort. One of the biggest factors here is the strong setup that’s featured throughout here that brings together several rather fun storylines for a rather fine starting point. Working well with the distanced sisters who are trying to repair their relationship after a slew of past trauma and issues between them that held up the reconciliation before getting them back together and trying to sell the property, this is a fine way to set the first half in motion by creating a solid conflict between them that gets them together at the location to start their healing. This goes along nicely with the secondary setup of the sisters discovering the history of the location involving the haunted house that provided the series of strange accidents and deaths that follow it while they try to figure out how to help their parents get back together that shows how the two stories at play work together.
That allows for a decent series of confrontations and encounters with the main scarecrow once it gets up and moving. With a fine opening sequence that involves the creature taking out the couple arriving at the campground, the later scenes are quite fun with the reanimation sequence featuring the creature coming to life after numerous amounts of ridicule before dealing out some rather fun stalking around the campground and surrounding locations. This goes along with the later encounters where the series of ambushes by the creature lead to a solid series of deaths and action here which never really rises above the decent but keeps everything at a frantic enough pace to provide simply decent kills and an intriguing look to the killer that are enough to hold this one up.
There are some issues featured here that bring it down. The main factor with this is the utterly sluggish and glacial pacing that spends too much time on the various storylines rather than dealing out the scarecrow slashing. Going in-depth on the sisters’ relationship and personal struggles with each other comes at the expense of the creature action which takes until the film’s half-over before it even gets resurrected in the first place, and then stopping immediately after that point to learn the truth by way of a videotape confession about the incident may put the pieces together rather nicely but also causes the pacing to become so start/stop at the point where you don't want that is utterly criminal. This type of stupidity is odd to see from a setup like this and tends to go along nicely here with the lower budget without any spectacular deaths or gore being the main drawbacks.
Overview: **.5/5
A solid enough if flawed genre effort, there’s enough to like here that keeps this one going even if there are some quite damaging factors here that do hold it back overall. Viewers who are fans of this style or the creative crew will be the main ones to give this a shot while most others out there should heed caution with this one.
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