Monthly Archives: September 2020

Guilt

“Guilt” as a Simplistic Story Reduced to Flat Ending

Co-directed by Karl Jenner and Lyndsay Sarah, Guilt is another story about how screwed up a psychologist is and the field of psychiatry. The story follows a psychologist, played by Janet Shay. Shay co-wrote the script with Sarah. Jessie is the psychologist’s name, and she feels angry about all the world’s child abuse. As a child psychologist, she goes vigilant by targeting child sex offenders. It’s not just any offenders, but those who escaped severe sentences. As the story progresses, Jessie has second thoughts about her bent on being a vigilante when she questions a former case with disturbing revelations—perhaps she has gone too far. The movie is available on Amazon.

A small-budget film with a limp script. The acting is functional but misses the underlying realistic angst of the anticipation of knocking off a few child offenders. The writing is void of a lot of dialogue, which is probably good since the actors lack harmony in the storytelling—like disjointed communications of “Now, why am I here?”

A background story of some characters would have added to the storytelling. Perhaps the two writers could have created more depth in their dialogue. According to the co-directors statement, “Dipping our toe into a feature film for the first time, we knew we would have to be as self-sufficient as possible. Guilt is a self-funded project by us both, but also two of our filmmaking buddies.”

Their statement says quite a bit, as Guilt is their first movie. “We carried out most of the roles and labor ourselves from the birth of the story idea to the last stages of post-production, and we’re still going. Quite an achievement, and sure, we’re proud of each other. Most importantly, we think we proved that you don’t necessarily require a big budget (or even a reasonably sized one) to produce a noteworthy film. It’s the team behind the film that counts,” they added.

Shots of stalking, walking, and dripping water faucets are standard-issue suspense/thriller ploys that fall flat in dry sand—no substance. The filmmakers could’ve learned about camera angles, timing, and undercurrents from Martin Scorsese.

I kept waiting for Jessie to roll with the revelations and change as a character, to no avail. The ending came abruptly without the movie offering any meaning to what I just saw. Inclusion was slow, tedious, and had multiple substantial plot holes, making me frustrated because they were obvious. They are first-time filmmakers, and it shows, but you have to admire them for completing the movie and getting it distributed.

The movie also stars Hayley Flowers and Sandra Stockley.

Killer Therapy

The Horrific Truth About Making “Killer Therapy”

I used to volunteer a lot of my time for the Citizen Commission on Human Rights, documenting, exposing, and disseminating psychiatric abuse. Today, I still volunteer, though not as much. Therefore, I feel qualified to say Killer Therapy into the making of a psycho killer.

Co-written and directed by Barry Jay, Killer Therapy follows a young man named Brain, played skillfully by Jonathan Taylor, who looks for help in his therapists, because he has issues with his father, mother, and adopted sister.

His life becomes lost in the mental health system, bouncing around from therapist after therapist, growing up into a young man, also played skillfully by Skyler Caleb, who is worse off than when he started going to the therapists. He still has anger issues, but it’s all twisted and confused from his psychotherapy.

When his life eventually hits rock bottom and falls apart, he correctly blames his therapists, embarking on the dark revenge of everyone who ever wronged him.

One-by-one, he kills his former therapists, then finally he comes to terms with the fact that that system doesn’t work, and he must accept his shortcomings by helping himself get better.

Killer Therapy is a horror, slasher movie, but not like the usual. Here you get the killers backstory, finding out that his therapists contributed to the making of a psycho slasher. It’s driven but a disjointed view that offers insight into the importance of reforming the mental health system.

The rest of the cast includes Elizabeth Keener, Thom Mathews, PJ Soles, Adrienne King, Daeg Faerch, Javon Johnson, and Ivy George.

Here is the only clip available, interviews with the actors and director.

High Tech “Time Loop” Immediately Delivered Flat

Time Loop

Written and directed by Ciro Sorrentino, Time Loop follows a father and son team of scientists played by Mino Sferra and Sam Gittins, respectively.

They unlock the secret of time travel while researching time movement. When the father and son perform their first test, they get trapped in a time loop. The result is their past actions have grave consequences in the present and future.

Time Loop

The story takes place in in a quiet Italian village, as the story unfolds the son has to face consequences for choices he hasn’t made yet, which is a nice spin but not original.

Ellie Poussot also stars as Celestine Dijoux.

The movie won several awards, including the Calcutta International Cult Film Festival for Best Horror and Science Fiction Film, MedFF for Best Photography, Toronto International Spring of Horror and Fantasy Film Festival for Best Film, and Virgin Sprint Cinefest for Gold Award as Debut Filmmaker.

Absolutely Lowest and Strange “Open 24 Hour” Visually Scares

Open 24 Hours, horror movie

Written and directed by Padraig Reynolds, Open 24 Hours follows a paranoid delusional woman, Mary White, played by Vanessa Grasse.  Recently released from a mental hospital, the poor woman was smart enough to get out of that place. Making matters worse, she sets her serial killer boyfriend on fire.

Try streaming the movie is best for instant horror.

Because of the abuse of the mental hospital, Mary suffers from severe paranoia and hallucinations. Her boyfriend, James Lincoln Fields, played by Cole Vigue, is a brutal serial killer known as The Rain Ripper. He enjoyed murdering people and making Mary watch.

The moment after being released from the hospital, Mary’s vulnerable demeanor aids her in obtaining employment at an all-night gas station. However, left alone to her own devices, her paranoia and hallucinations return with furious consequences. This is where the most gruesome images play out on film.

If you are into horrific stuff like hammering heads and such, then these things take a gruesome turn when customers and friends suddenly start turning up dead and mutilated all around her.  It a tough movie to watch and enjoy.

Reynold’s inspiration for this movie came to him while filming Rites of Spring in Mississippi.  “We were scouting locations for the movie and came across this time-worn Gas Station on a lonely rural road. This gas station was a character in itself, and I knew that it would make a great self-contained horror movie.”

The idea would not leave his mind, “I went back to my hotel room and began writing the script. I knew I wanted a strong female protagonist to be as lonely as our main location. Mary is a damaged doll in a thrift store dress. She is desperately trying to put her life back together after years of abuse from her serial killer boyfriend who made her watch while killing people. She gets a job and feels that her haunted past is finally behind her. But on a cold rainy night, the past returns with a vengeance.”

The rest of the cast includes Brendan Fletcher as Bobby, Emily Tennant as Debbie and Daniel O’Meara as Tom Doogan.