Scary. Bloody. Funny. Thought-provoking. 9 Skelpometer points. Go see it!

Facebook mini-review first posted 22nd March 2019
Scary. Bloody. Funny. Thought-provoking. 9 Skelpometer points. Go see it!

Facebook mini-review first posted 22nd March 2019
Blood. Heavy Metal. More blood. Driving in LA. Struggling for your art. More blood. More Heavy Metal.
You’re right. I liked it. Has many faults, but gets 7 S-Points
It also has Norm.

Facebook mini-review first posted 11th April 2020
Utter nonsense. I loved it! Perfect for an afternoon off. A solid 7 Skelpometer points.

FaceBook mini-review first posted 24th April 2020
Late to the party on this. Genuinely terrifying. 9 ‘oh shit’ points on the S-scale

FaceBook mini-review first posted 25th April 2020
Creepy, well-made and brilliantly acted. Solid 9/10 on the Skelpometer

FaceBook mini-review first posted on 16th March 2019

If you come to Pyewacket expecting full-on terror and jump-scares from the start then you will be disappointed, however if you like movies that build slowly and steadily, with clear (if you look for them) signposts as to where you are heading, then you will enjoy this film a lot more. A few reviewers seem to have taken against this Adam MacDonald movie because it isn’t the former, which seems daft – it’s like saying you don’t like waffles because they’re not pancakes!
The story is centred around teenager Leah Reyes, played brilliantly by Nicole Muñoz and her relationship with her mother who is only ever known as ‘Mrs Reyes’. Laurie Holden turns in a masterful performance as the mother, who obviously doesn’t warrant a first-name in the self-centred world of the teenager. There is a small but important supporting cast of teenagers that play a central role in the decisions that Leah ultimately makes, but really this film could have been done as a two-hander and still have been as effective.
We learn early on that the Reyes family have suffered a major loss, leaving Mrs Reyes as a single mother, and there are some scenes that show us that neither of our main characters appear to be dealing well with this bereavement. This fraught parent-teenager relationship is stretched to breaking point when Mrs Reyes decides to uproot the family and move to a secluded house in a forest, some 60 minute drive away from their current abode. This leads to a decision by Leah, who is obsessed with the occult, which she quickly starts to regret.
At this point in the movie we start to feel a growing sense of foreboding, and there are things suggested at and glimpsed in the shadows that make us start to wonder what is real. I think this is where people could take against this film, as nothing is clear-cut, and if you want quick edits and multiple scares then that’s not going to happen. You will however, be taken through to a conclusion that I found both shocking and satisfying.
I found this an intriguing and engaging study of loss and regret, and if it was just played as a drama and not a horror I think I would have enjoyed it almost as much. This low-budget creeper warrants a Skelpometer score of 8 out of 10.
Watch Pyewacket free on All4 until 18th May 2020
Meh. Beautifully shot, with some good acting – really good atmospheric build-up but ultimately disappointing. Scrapes in with 6 S-Points. Maybe 5. Yeah, 5.

FaceBook mini-review first posted 25th April 2020
Enjoyable late-night hokum set in the 80s. Gets extra credit for an accurate discussion about Metallica in the first act 🤘🏻. 6 genre-specific points on the S-Scale.
Edit: I rewatched the last 45 minutes of this as I realised I may have fallen asleep and missed some stuff, and I did! Enough for me to add an extra point, so this gets a good 7/10 now!

Watched this last night, and I’m still not sure what I make of it. I can’t decide if it is a shameless exploitation of the real story, or if it successfully manages to convey the idiocy and juvenile posturing that led to tragedy. It’s certainly well made, well acted and keeps you engaged, but is this a story that should be done in a horror-ish style? Unrated for now…

FaceBook mini-review first posted 2nd May 2020