Creeping Death (2024) by Matt Sampere


Director: Matt Sampere
Year: 2024
Country: USA
Alternate Titles: N/A
Genre: Supernatural Slasher

Plot:
Trying to take care of his mother, a teen finds his friends have disrupted his Halloween plans by stealing a sack of sacrificial offerings for a Celtic deity known as Aos Si which has now turned its attention to them and forces him to help stop the creature from taking them all out.

Review:

This was a generally decent if somewhat underwhelming effort at times. One of the better features here is the solid sense of atmosphere and lore attempted here incorporating the Celtic deity into the mix during the holiday season. The main idea of the deity effectively being an early purveyor of Halloween lore by offering the kind of setup that shows itself as an early setup for trick-or-treating in how people would leave sacrificial gifts for it in exchange for their safety and is a practice honored by the town that they’re too self-centered to honor. With the way it works here involving the being as a figure that they anger and have it be targeting them for the remainder of the first, this setup brings about a lot of rather fun traditional revenge motifs which are woven together quite nicely bringing in the folklore of the spirit’s origins to change things up.

That also allows the film to really ramp up the holiday aesthetic here with the usual assortment of decor and ornamentation found during the holiday, as the whole thing is littered with trick-or-treaters, lighted pumpkins, and everyone going around in their costumes before being attacked by the creature in some gruesome and graphic attacks. The look of the spirit is decent enough, but its inhuman appearance and powers make the encounters solid enough, including the necking couple outside the friend’s house, the race to get away when it appears outside the group or the attack at the house where it generates some fun stalking scenes along with several great kills.


There are some big issues to be had with this one. One of the main issues with the film is the sense of over-familiarity that runs wild throughout here as everything comes across as any number of similar genre efforts. Featuring an assortment of unlikable teens getting in over their heads by disrupting something and getting a supernatural act of vengeance to stalk them for their misdeeds is not as original a premise as it should be with everything here running through the same patterns a storyline like this usually dictates. By staying in such familiar realms, it doesn’t do much of anything new and remains familiar and predictable as a result of the assortment of teens he’s stalking being the usual unlikable selection of figures in this type of film doesn’t help this one much.

The other big drawback with the film is the lack of explanation for why the main teen who knows about the creature and what’s going on has to go through with helping the other group get away from the creature. The blackmail used to get him onto their side being friends in the past and how to help them get away with the desecration of the sacrificial offering makes no sense and putting himself in danger to help them figure out what's going on isn’t well throughout. The last factor with this one is an uneven first half where there’s way too much emphasis on the cancer diagnosis to give the film enough time to get much else explored or explained before getting to more traditional matters in the second half. These all manage to bring this one down overall.


Overview: ***/5
A solid if by-the-numbers genre effort, there’s a lot to like here although it still has more than enough issues to drag it down into the mediocrity of the genre due to its issues. Those who are fine with those factors, are curious about it, or are fans of this type of genre effort will have a lot to like with this one while most others out there should heed caution.

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