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‘Wrong Turn’ (2021) Review: Puts The Gory in Allegory

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Wrong Turn (2021) - Saban Films

It takes a lot of guts for a writer to completely change his original concept for a movie that’s already been made, remaking it into something timely but altogether different. Alan B. McElroy has done just that in Wrong Turn (2021). In fact, he’s sort of given us three-movies-in-one this time, which is far superior to his original idea, although it feels more like a retcon than a reboot.

Wrong Turn (it has dropped The Foundation in the original title) is directed by Mike P. Nelson who is mostly known for his foley work and the movie The Domestics. That horror survival film is the perfect segue into this Wrong Turn makeover which employs some of its same principles right down to political allegory and costuming.

Wrong Turn (2021) - Saban Films

Wrong Turn (2021) – Saban Films

Forget what you know about the original Wrong Turn and its follow-ups including cannibal mutants with specialized marksman skills of their trade weapons. This film follows six college friends who for some reason want to hike the mountain trails of Appalachia. Whereas the original movie’s premise followed someone who actually made a wrong turn, in this one the kids have a motivation for being where they are and it’s not because of a seemingly serendipitous car accident.

As stated before, this movie is a parfait of narratives, the first layer of which is about a father (Mattew Modine) searching for his missing daughter, Jen, played by the energetic Charlotte Vega. He visits a small town just below the mountains to look for her because she hasn’t called him in two weeks. The townsfolk aren’t too helpful and warn him that she’s probably gone forever.

Wrong Turn (2021) - Saban Films

Wrong Turn (2021) – Saban Films

Flashback to six weeks earlier and we see the friends en route to their destination. This chunk of the film is really the only remnant of the original. After an awkward bar scene in which the locals scare them, the friends set to the trails the next morning. For about half an hour after that, we get some Wrong Turn trap sequences to appease the fans, then the movie makes a hard left and becomes a timely tale of neo-patriots living in the woods who, for over a hundred years, have developed their own society called The Foundation. Think, Midsommar meets The Hunger Games.

The remaining young hikers are then put on trial in front of the presiding clan daddy John Venable (Bill Sage) in a cavernous courtroom with flaming wall scones made out of large bull horns. The male inhabitants are dressed in pelts, and antlers while the women and children look like they haven’t showered in ages and run around barefooted. You get the dimly-lit picture.

Wrong Turn (2021) - Saban Films

Wrong Turn (2021) – Saban Films

By this point, you are either invested in the film or have abandoned it. But this is where the film intrigued me the most. Vega’s character has to outsmart the doomsdayers in order to survive. She makes some hard choices, each with its own set of consequences. I felt compelled to root for Jen on her journey from lass to lionheart especially in the final act.

Modine of course is the star power this film needs. The veteran actor brings human connectivity to a script that otherwise calls for the young adults to repetitively scream, “We gotta get the fuck out of here!” over and over again. Modine and Vega find their motivations and make the film come alive especially in the action-packed last third.

Wrong Turn (2021) - Saban Films

Wrong Turn (2021) – Saban Films

Not everyone is going to like this new version of Wrong Turn. It’s not a direct sequel and the formula has been tweaked so much only the name has survived in spirit. It has its fair share of gore, however sparse. But I’m going to recommend it because I like the direction it took. I was on the edge of my seat at some points and genuinely invested in the outcome even though logic suffers in the process.

McElroy has written something timely that may have betrayed his original plot, but I think it’s worth it. I think Wrong Turn is better than the first film and therefore its celluloid siblings. Perhaps my favorite part of the movie was when the credits roll, not because I was glad it was over but because the denouement plays out over them in a single take. And that’s exactly what this movie does: subverts what you’re expecting in order to freshen up the premise no matter how you feel about it. And if that doesn’t sum up the state of the world right now then I don’t know what does.

Wrong Turn (2021)will premiere in theaters for one-night-only January 26, 2021, and January 30, 2021. Tickets for the premiere event are available now at www.FathomEvents.com and at movie theater box offices.

Correction: the text was updated to credit Bill Sage as the character John Venable not Tim DeZarn.

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Panic Fest 2024 Review: ‘Haunted Ulster Live’

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Everything old is new again.

On Halloween 1998, the local news of Northern Ireland decide to do a special live report from an allegedly haunted house in Belfast. Hosted by local personality Gerry Burns (Mark Claney) and popular children’s presenter Michelle Kelly (Aimee Richardson) they intend to look at the supernatural forces disturbing the current family living there. With legends and folklore abound, is there an actual spirit curse in the building or something far more insidious at work?

Presented as a series of found footage from a long forgotten broadcast, Haunted Ulster Live follows similar formats and premises as Ghostwatch and The WNUF Halloween Special with a news crew investigating the supernatural for big ratings only to get in over their heads. And while the plot has certainly been done before, director Dominic O’Neill’s 90’s set tale of local access horror manages to stand out on its own ghastly feet. The dynamic between Gerry and Michelle is most prominent, with him being an experienced broadcaster who thinks this production is beneath him and Michelle being fresh blood who is considerably annoyed at being presented as costumed eye candy. This builds as the events within and around the domicile becomes too much to ignore as anything less than the real deal.

The cast of characters is rounded out by the McKillen family who have been dealing with the haunting for some time and how it’s had an effect on them. Experts are brought in to help explain the situation including the paranormal investigator Robert (Dave Fleming) and the psychic Sarah (Antoinette Morelli) who bring their own perspectives and angles to the haunting. A long and colorful history is established about the house, with Robert discussing how it used to be the site of an ancient ceremonial stone, the center of leylines, and how it was possibly possessed by the ghost of a former owner named Mr. Newell. And local legends abound about a nefarious spirit named Blackfoot Jack that would leave trails of dark footprints in his wake. It’s a fun twist having multiple potential explanations for the site’s strange occurrences instead of one end-all be-all source. Especially as the events unfold and the investigators try to discover the truth.

At its 79 minute timelength, and the encompassing broadcast, it’s a bit of a slow burn as the characters and lore is established. Between some news interruptions and behind the scenes footage, the action is mostly focused on Gerry and Michelle and the build up to their actual encounters with forces beyond their comprehension. I will give kudos that it went places I didn’t expect, leading to a surprisingly poignant and spiritually horrifying third act.

So, while Haunted Ulster Live isn’t exactly trendsetting, it definitely follows in the footsteps of similar found footage and broadcast horror films to walk its own path. Making for an entertaining and compact piece of mockumentary. If you’re a fan of the sub-genres, Haunted Ulster Live is well worth a watch.

3 eyes out of 5
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Panic Fest 2024 Review: ‘Never Hike Alone 2’

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There are fewer icons more recognizable than the slasher. Freddy Krueger. Michael Myers. Victor Crowley. Notorious killers who always seem to come back for more no matter how many times they are slain or their franchises seemingly put to a final chapter or nightmare. And so it seems that even some legal disputes cannot stop one of the most memorable movie murderers of all: Jason Voorhees!

Following the events of the first Never Hike Alone, outdoorsman and YouTuber Kyle McLeod (Drew Leighty) has been hospitalized after his encounter with the long thought dead Jason Voorhees, saved by perhaps the hockey masked killer’s greatest adversary Tommy Jarvis (Thom Mathews) who now currently works as an EMT around Crystal Lake. Still haunted by Jason, Tommy Jarvis struggles to find a sense of stability and this latest encounter is pushing him to end the reign of Voorhees once and for all…

Never Hike Alone made a splash online as a well shot and thoughtful fan film continuation of the classic slasher franchise that was built up with the snowbound follow up Never Hike In The Snow and now climaxing with this direct sequel. It’s not only an incredible Friday The 13th love letter, but a well thought out and entertaining epilogue of sorts to the infamous ‘Tommy Jarvis Trilogy’ from within the franchise that encapsulated Friday The 13th Part IV: The Final Chapter, Friday The 13th Part V: A New Beginning, and Friday The 13th Part VI: Jason Lives. Even getting some of the original cast back as their characters to continue the tale! Thom Mathews being the most prominent as Tommy Jarvis, but with other series casting like Vincent Guastaferro returning as now Sheriff Rick Cologne and still having a bone to pick with Jarvis and the mess around Jason Voorhees. Even featuring some Friday The 13th alumni like Part III‘s Larry Zerner as the mayor of Crystal Lake!

On top of that, the movie delivers on kills and action. Taking turns that some of the previous fils never got the chance to deliver on. Most prominently, Jason Voorhees going on a rampage through Crystal Lake proper when he slices his way through a hospital! Creating a nice throughline of the mythology of Friday The 13th, Tommy Jarvis and the cast’s trauma, and Jason doing what he does best in the most cinematically gory ways possible.

The Never Hike Alone films from Womp Stomp Films and Vincente DiSanti are a testament to the fanbase of Friday The 13th and the still enduring popularity of those films and of Jason Voorhees. And while officially, no new movie in the franchise is on the horizon for the foreseeable future, at the very least there is some comfort knowing fans are willing to go to these lengths to fill the void.

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Panic Fest 2024 Review: ‘The Ceremony Is About To Begin’

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People will look for answers and belonging in the darkest places and the darkest people. The Osiris Collective is a commune predicated upon ancient Egyptian theology and was run by the mysterious Father Osiris. The group boasted dozens of members, each forgoing their old lives for one held in the Egyptian themed land owned by Osiris in Northern California. But the good times take a turn for the worst when in 2018, an upstart member of the collective named Anubis (Chad Westbrook Hinds) reports Osiris disappearing while mountain climbing and declaring himself the new leader. A schism ensued with many members leaving the cult under Anubis’ unhinged leadership. A documentary is being made by a young man named Keith (John Laird) whose fixation with The Osiris Collective stems from his girlfriend Maddy leaving him for the group several years ago. When Keith gets invited to document the commune by Anubis himself, he decides to investigate, only to get wrapped up in horrors he couldn’t even imagine…

The Ceremony Is About To Begin is the latest genre twisting horror film from Red Snow‘s Sean Nichols Lynch. This time tackling cultist horror along with a mockumentary style and the Egyptian mythology theme for the cherry on top. I was a big fan of Red Snow‘s subversiveness of the vampire romance sub-genre and was excited to see what this take would bring. While the movie has some interesting ideas and a decent tension between the meek Keith and the erratic Anubis, it just doesn’t exactly thread everything together in a succinct fashion.

The story begins with a true crime documentary style interviewing former members of The Osiris Collective and sets-up what led the cult to where it is now. This aspect of the storyline, especially Keith’s own personal interest in the cult, made it an interesting plotline. But aside from some clips later on, it doesn’t play as much a factor. The focus is largely on the dynamic between Anubis and Keith, which is toxic to put it lightly. Interestingly, Chad Westbrook Hinds and John Lairds are both credited as writers on The Ceremony Is About To Begin and definitely feel like they’re putting their all into these characters. Anubis is the very definition of a cult leader. Charismatic, philosophical, whimsical, and threateningly dangerous at the drop of a hat.

Yet strangely, the commune is deserted of all cult members. Creating a ghost town that only amps up the danger as Keith documents Anubis’ alleged utopia. A lot of the back and forth between them drags at times as they struggle for control and Anubis keeps continuing to convince Keith to stick around despite the threatening situation. This does lead to a pretty fun and bloody finale that fully leans into mummy horror.

Overall, despite meandering and having a bit of a slow pace, The ceremony Is About To Begin is a fairly entertaining cult, found footage, and mummy horror hybrid. If you want mummies, it delivers on mummies!

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