Resolution (2012) - 5/10
A man forces his drug addict friend into a one week detox, but strange occurrences keep disrupting them.
Peter Cilella stars as Michael, who receives an erratic video from his childhood friend Chris (Vinny Curran). Thinking this is his last chance to save the drug addict Chris, Michael handcuffs his friend to the wall of a dilapidated rural house in a forced detox. However, a series of strange occurrences begin taking place, making Michael believe someone is watching them...
Resolution was directed by Justin Benson and Aaron Scott Moorhead, and was written by Benson. The two served nearly every role in the production, including cinematography, editing, and producing. That will come as little surprise when you lean this film has a microscopic budget of $20,000! How does this uber low budget movie fare?
It's an okay movie, better than it deserves to be based on its budget, but not without problems. Resolution has an intriguing mystery, with multiple unexplained occurrences happening that Michael spends the run time trying to get to the bottom of. Most of the occurrences are very small, which makes the audience question who or what is leaving these cryptic messages behind. The movie also sets up numerous red herrings and unusual characters to keep you guessing.
However, in my opinion, things unravel in the climax. Your milage may vary, but the movie goes in a very meta direction that did not resonate with me. To my knowledge, a lot of the film's unanswered questions are resolved in a future sequel called The Endless (2017), but as far as this standalone movie goes I didn't find the conclusion to be satisfying. Also, I hate to complain about this in a movie that cost less than a Big Mac to produce, but some of the acting was rough. I would've let it slide, but during the portion of the movie where the occurrences go from "sightly creepy" to "batshit crazy", one character seemed slightly inconvenienced when the normal reaction should've been hysterical panic (emote, dammit!).
Overall, Resolution is a movie that looks outstanding relative to its shoestring budget. Though I have mixed feelings about the content of the movie, at the very least it is intriguing to see something
this good made for so little. It was good enough that I'm interested to see where the plot goes in the sequel, at least. I have to note that I am in the minority on this movie, as it currently has a 3.4/5 on Letterboxd, so take this review with a grain of salt.
As Above, So Below (2014) - 5/10
A group exploring the Catacombs of Paris discover dark secrets hidden below the city.
Perdita Weeks stars as Scarlett, an explorer who is searching for the Philosopher's stone, a legendary substance which is said to grant eternal life. Scarlett assembles a ragtag group of explorers, including her former lover George (Ben Feldman) and local guide Papillon (Francois Civil), to search for the ancient relic. However, as the group descends further underground, they come to realize why the relic has gone undiscovered for so long...
As Above, So Below was directed by John Erick Dowdle and written by he and Drew Dowdle. The movie was filmed on location in the real Catacombs of Paris, creating a claustrophobic, difficult shoot for the cast and crew. Were their efforts worth it?
Meh... kinda? As Above, So Below is a well made movie, but one that frustrates me on many levels because it could've been much better. It's a found footage film, but doesn't really feel like it because one of the group members is filming everything on a professional camera. The characters wear headlamps - which look identical to one I purchased earlier this year for $10 from Home Depot - that supposedly also have cameras built in, but these are seldom used. Regardless of which cameras we're looking through though, the movie does a good job with claustrophobia early on.
The film is very slow however, with the first hour of this 93 minute movie strictly focusing on the characters exploring, with few horror elements to be found. This still works because the location itself is creepy enough on its own, but the trade off is that the characters are a mixed bag. Scarlett is not a sympathetic character at all, as she is very headstrong and selfish, putting her needs above everyone else's. Many of the other characters are complete window dressing/body count fodder, and you can tell a lot of the dialogue was improvised with a general direction the conversation is supposed to go in.
The characterizations are a nitpick though; my real issue comes when the "horror" in this movie starts. Awful, awful CGI accompanied by bad shaky cam that wasn't present until the climax. It's really jarring because the first two acts are a slow burn, but then the movie becomes erratic in the worst way possible. The filmmakers really struggle with distinguishing between scaring the audience versus startling them, as there are a barrage of poorly done jump scares at the end of the movie. The film basically turns the events into a haunted house, throwing every piece of poorly rendered CGI crap they could at the camera. It's a shame too, because there were a few moments I found to be creepy.
(Also as a nitpick, before the characters make their descent, the movie makes a big deal about how they'll all die if they run out of batteries. When faced with that reality after losing their spare batteries, the group verbally agree that they need to conserve their headlamps. Not a single character turns their light off, they don't scavenge extra headlamps off of their fallen comrades, and no one's headlamp ever runs out of juice. I know this is a ticky-tacky complaint even from me, but c'mon!).
Overall, As Above, So Below is a well made movie that has a crash landing. What starts out and spends most of its time as a decent, maybe even above average, found footage film completely unravels thanks to a laughably bad ending. The film did poorly with critics, but fans do seem to like it and the movie performed well commercially, earning $42M against a $5M budget.