The Old Ones (2024) by Chad Ferrin


Director: Chad Ferrin
Year: 2024
Country: USA
Alternate Titles: N/A
Genre: Creature Feature

Plot:
After escaping from a demon cult, a man and a teen survivor find themselves targeted by the cult to continue preparing him for the cult’s upcoming celebrations requiring him to be involved in the ceremony against his will and must stop their plans before it comes to fruition.

Review:

Overall, this was a fairly solid if problematic genre effort. The main factor that works here is the rather fun action and special effects that result from the confrontations featured here. The central concept of this one allows for a constant stream of encounters where the demonic creatures appear trying to kill the two of them and the means of escaping the beings allows for a solid display of practical effects make-up and gore to be delivered. While it can show its limitations with these sequences, the use of physical suits and masks is quite nice with the demonic fish-beings given a solid showcase with their presence providing plenty of decent gore throughout here. None of this is mind-blowing or amazing but the mere inclusion is enough to be the big selling point here, and with the great pacing, keeping this one entertaining provides some likable factors for this one.

This one does have some big issues that hold it down. Among the main issues here is the convoluted and absolutely difficult storyline that has so little sense about what’s going on it feels impossible to tell what the point is. The idea of a time-traveling being from the past corrupted by the demon cult for a special ceremonial ritual who takes in a survivor of the creatures’ attacking those who took the guy in and sets off on a road trip through the countryside to get back to the past where he can stop the creatures then is so over-the-top and twisted it’s hard to make sense of everything. That this comes off because it keeps introducing new hurdles or obstacles on their road trip as the two try to stay one step ahead of the pursuing creatures is all fluff with new stuff added more as an excuse to reference other bits of writing than telling a coherent story.

It also doesn’t help that so much of this one is supposed to be a massive, sprawling epic trying to contain this time-traveling battle for the ages but is almost too ambitious for its good. The use of vicious fish-people demon creatures, body-hopping possession, interdimensional traveling machines, and occult objects all come together into a wide-ranging storyline that feels like they belong in a film with far more of a budget behind them than what’s typically found in a low-budget indie like this one. While they all look impressive in design, the execution leaves little impression about what they are as there’s little mixing up the emotionless, immobile masks that are typically present here. Even worse is the laughably inaudible dialogue by the distorted voice of the possessed demons where it is next-to-impossible to understand without using subtitles with how they come off, and all these end up holding this one back the most.


Overview: **.5/5
A solid enough if somewhat disappointing effort, there’s a lot to like here in the right approach although those issues do manage to bring this one down overall. Give it a shot if you’re intrigued by these types of adaptations, appreciate these kinds of indie genre efforts, or are fans of the creative crew while most others out there turned off by these factors should heed caution.

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