Director: Ursula Dabrowsky
Year: 2023
Country: Australia
Alternate Titles: Chasing Demons
Genre: Psycho/Thriller
Plot:
Arriving at a remote cottage, a couple’s attempts at building their relationship in seclusion are upended by a revelation that one of their siblings’ psychotic tendencies are coming to the forefront in an unexpected way when they follow the couple to the cottage and set about trying to ruin the night.
Review:
Overall, this was a pretty solid if troubling genre thriller. The main thing that works here is the solid starting point that offers not just a means of getting the couple to the house but plays well with the idea of mental insanity and isolation. The main point of the first half to set up the couple and their relationship together by showing them arrive at the location and go about getting into the mindset of their forgotten sister trailing them comes about quite nicely overall. Focusing on introducing it so subtly against the rest of the material featuring the marital quirks or general issues with each other slowly turns into a series of exposes on how the sister is so mentally challenged and unhinged that everything going on is quite built up quite well.
Even the scenes later on showing the invasion and attempts at rectifying a perceived wrong come together well. With this setting the payoff of the trauma we’ve gotten until then makes this section of the film descends into a strikingly tense and thrilling series of setpieces that are even more impressive given the one-shot nature of how this plays out, everything here is rather fun. The fact that it’s just immensely slow and not that interesting due to the excruciatingly slow pace and tempo of everything as there’s so little energy or urgency to anything going on it just sucks the life out of the material. Regardless of how fun everything is and how it all comes together, the lethargic action just undoes everything positive to the point of draining this one completely for its detrimental factors.
Overview: **/5
An overall intriguing if somewhat problematic thriller, this one manages to be enjoyable enough for what it is that there’s enough to like here while being let down by a few major drawbacks. Those who appreciate this kind of approach or are interested in this style will have the most to like here while most others out there should heed caution.
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