|
|
When one day Jennifer (Anne McCaffery-French) spots a ghostly girl in
her garden, she naturally panics, but when she reaches for her phone to
call for help, the girl's gone. That evening, she spots more ghostly
beings on her porch, and they slowly pour into her house. With her being
much too nervous to dial the emergency number, she retreats to room after
room, only armed with a knife, to avoid the ghostly beings. But who are
they, why are they after her, and why seem all these ghosts stem from the
photographs of loved ones hung up on the walls? And these are
questions that are not answered in The Darkened Cottage - which
makes the film all the more powerful though, as it leaves room for one's
own interpretation of what's actually going on, and one can't be blamed
for coming up with quite a dark backstory, maybe much darker than
writer/director Benji Wragg has ever intended. Meanwhile, on the more
technical side of filmmaking, Wragg really excels, his direction is
suspenseful, atmospherre-heavy and genre savvy, while Anne
McCaffery-French gives a powerful and utterly relatable performance,
making this a pretty cool short horror ride.
|
|
|