Slapface (2021)
5/10
Important topic with a bleak delivery
6 February 2022
Slapface holds a powerful social message - one worth exploring, however the execution was marred a little by slow pacing. I applaud the director (Jeremiah Kipp) for tackling the topic of bullying using a supernatural spin. For a first time feature film it got its point across and I hope to see a variety of work come out of this director in the future.

Having said that, I did find myself favouring the message more than the delivery of this film. Some horror elements were present but because the focus was a little heavy on the metaphor aspect, for me the sense of real fear struggled to hit the mark, still, it did deliver on an uneasy oppressive tension throughout.

General film observation - I'm seeing a consistent trend in the last five years or so with first-time feature film directors from the current crop of talented up-and-coming filmmakers. Slow burn horrors such as The Babadook, The VVitch, Relic, Separation, etc, and now Slapface, all use these narrative devices - they take a serious social issue, personify that issue into a non-speaking boogey man who delivers menace, create an oppressive and bleak tone, slow pacing, minimal dialogue, create characters that are designed to represent an aspect of the chosen social issue causing them to be somewhat flat, and use these elements to create the allegory. It's a decent enough structure but we're getting a few too many of these atmospheric slow-moving quiet narratives now, and they're starting to feel homogeneous.

I get it; they're cheap, relatively easy for first time filmmakers to write and get made, and have something worthwhile to say; however they are so slow and so depressing. Call me old-fashioned but horror used to be fun and campy but most importantly scary, and still have something of significance to say. This current generation of horror seems to be interpreting horror now not as something to make an audience feel fear in the exhilarating sense, but the heavy, overly serious, oppressive, existential dread of being alive - a reflection of the times and all that jazz I guess.

But I wish we would foster a culture of horror filmmakers by teaching them to create really compelling characters, dialogue that leaves you hungry for the next line, high energy moments that keeps the pacing balanced, and moments that resonate in the memory. Alien, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Rosemary's Baby, The Exorcist, to name a few - these films were the days of interesting characters, memorable scenes, monsters that actually spoke (or growled lol) and had their own personalities that took their characters far beyond simple symbolism. These slow burns are getting harder to watch and I hope this trend peters out soon.
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