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Surgeons of Horror

~ Dissecting horror films

Surgeons of Horror

Tag Archives: Alexandre Aja

Never Let Go: Survival Horror That Grips but Doesn’t Thrill

21 Saturday Dec 2024

Posted by surgeons of horror in Movie review

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Alexandre Aja, Anthony B Jenkins, halle berry, never let go, percy daffs iv

Alexandre Aja’s Never Let Go offers a chilling yet uneven exploration of survival, isolation, and familial bonds under the shadow of a supernatural threat. Starring Halle Berry as the fiercely protective Momma, the film presents moments of genuine tension and intrigue but struggles to rise above its derivative foundation.

Set against the foreboding backdrop of an expansive forest, the story revolves around Momma and her two sons, Nolan (Percy Daggs IV) and Samuel (Anthony B. Jenkins), as they navigate a world seemingly overrun by an entity known only as “The Evil.” The family’s strict rituals—tied ropes, daily prayers, and isolation—serve as both their salvation and source of conflict.

Halle Berry delivers a raw and committed performance as a mother unraveling under the weight of paranoia and hunger. Berry’s portrayal grounds the film, lending depth to Momma’s escalating visions of supernatural horrors. Her scenes with Percy Daggs IV and Anthony B. Jenkins brim with palpable tension, highlighting the strain of survival on family dynamics.

The tension-building sequences—particularly a near-fatal encounter with “The Evil” and a brutal winter forcing difficult choices—showcase Aja’s talent for crafting dread. The film’s snowy, desolate landscapes and Robin Coudert’s haunting score amplify the atmosphere, creating an environment where danger lurks in every shadow.

Yet, Never Let Go falters in its reliance on familiar survival horror tropes. The central mystery of “The Evil” is teased effectively but never fully realised, leaving viewers with a predictable twist and a sense of missed opportunity. While the narrative toys with psychological ambiguity—questioning whether the supernatural threat is real or imagined—it ultimately settles on an ending that feels more derivative than daring.

Despite its shortcomings, the film’s production values shine. Aja’s direction captures the claustrophobia of the cabin and the vast, oppressive wilderness beyond. The child actors deliver commendable performances, particularly Jenkins, whose descent into erratic behavior is both unsettling and tragic.

The Prognosis:

Never Let Go is a competent but uninspired entry into the survival horror genre. Its strongest elements—Berry’s performance, atmospheric tension, and a striking score—are weighed down by a lack of originality and a conclusion that plays it too safe. While not a misfire, it’s unlikely to leave a lasting impression beyond its on-screen talent.

  • Saul Muerte

A small jaunt through the history of hillbilly horror.

30 Tuesday May 2023

Posted by surgeons of horror in Uncategorized

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Alexandre Aja, badlands, deliverance, desmond harrington, don't go in the woods, duel, eliza dushka, Friday the 13th, hillbilly horror, i spit on your grave, jeremy sisto, john boorman, just before dawn, Peter Weir, redneck zombies, Steven Spielberg, terence malik, the burning, The Cars That Ate Paris, The Hills Have Eyes, the texas chain saw massacre, the tourist trap, the wicker man, troma entertainment, tucker and dale vs evil, Wes Craven, wrong turn

There is an inherent fear that we hold deeply of our fellow ‘man’ and the extremes of depravity that we go to away from the confines of urban security. It seems that the further or deeper we go into the backwoods or remote locations, the greater our fear becomes. At the turn of the seventies, now prominent film director Steven Spielberg exposed those fears in the open road, hauling ass from an unknown truck driver across the vast landscape of the US for Duel; John Boorman took the love of adventure and male bonding across the riverways into more dark terrain in Deliverance; and Terence Malik offered up a slice of teenage runaways on a killing spree in South Dakota in Badlands, but it didn’t stop on US soil. In Britain they amped up the fear of folk stories by subjecting its audience to the remote Scottish island of Summerisle in The Wicker Man; and in Australia Peter Weir was serving up some outback disturbance as political commentary for The Cars That Ate Paris. It was a growing trend that was steadily getting darker.

Arguably it was in 1974 that close scrutiny was cast on the unknown and sheltered parts of the country, and a family feasting on travellers to fuel their appetite in The Texas Chain Saw Massacre that would throw turmoil into the mix and slowly craft out the slasher sub-genre. A master of horror, Wes Craven would pick up that agitation baton and run with it for The Hills Have Eyes, casting everyday white American family against a mutant inbred family set in the heart of the Californian desert to really shake us to the core. From here on in, the audience had hillbilly horror to contend with as a new playing field for the genre.

As we etch our way into the late seventies and early 80s, the raw appeal was on show to explore through I Spit On Your Grave; Tourist Trap; and the birth of slasher itself in Friday the 13th. The eighties would then play around with this concept with similar fodder in The Burning; Don’t Go In The Woods; and Just Before Dawn. It wouldn’t be long before the subject would be made lightly and Troma Entertainment didn’t disappoint with the horror comedy, Redneck Zombies to combine this trepidation and mix it with the undead. 

The nineties would prove a lonely trail until we would be taken off the road and onto an unbeaten track in 2003’s Wrong Turn, a film that has somehow spawned six follow up features. Now, this may be a contentious point but it still stands strong twenty years on to me for nostalgic purposes and no amount of tree-leaping naysayers can sway me from this opinion. And while part of my reasoning may swiftly be driven by the casting of Eliza Dushka its heroine (still a Faith fan and not in the Buffy camp), but also with a pre-Dexter Desmond Harrington and a post Clueless Jeremy Sisto in its fold. And that’s not to mention a Queens of the Stone Age track in the soundtrack to complete the auditory reckoning, and some of the team from Stan Winston studios to add the gloss and gore. Sure it’s twee horror, but it continued this trend of hillbilly horror, satiating those needs and passing on the baton again for more comedy visions in Tucker and Dale vs Evil, and full out gross horror in the remake of The Hills Have Eyes by Alexandre Aja, bringing us full circle again. 

The subject is here to stay as long as our fear remains, and in a post COVID world combined with our isolated lives, surviving or not through cyber connections, surely that fear will only grow stronger and thrust us into a whole new realm of revulsion. Hopefully this will pave way for more creativity to force us on the path of destruction and desolation.

Movie review: Crawl

17 Wednesday Jul 2019

Posted by surgeons of horror in Movie review

≈ 1 Comment

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Alexandre Aja, Barry Pepper, croc horror, crocodile, Kaya Scodelario

I have to say that I honestly don’t think I’ve had this much fun watching a movie at the cinemas for quite some time. Sure, this little movie does a lot to stretch the realms of believability, especially bearing in mind that there is supposed to be a category 5 hurricane bearing down on our father-daughter duo battling for survival, and some of the actions of the killer crocs also fall into question, but by the time this all unfolds I’m willing to forgo these discrepancies and this has a lot to do with the time and care taken into building character and history, so that your focus is on backing them against the odds. 

The strength of the actors portraying the afore-mentioned father (Barry Pepper) and daughter (Kaya Scodelario) should also be acknowledged as they share the brunt of the on-screen time to portray the broken family dynamic that has formed between the two of them. Once inseparable as Hayley has been pursuing a swimming career, backed by her one-time coach, and father, Dave. Time and circumstances have allowed them to drift apart, but when crisis hits (in the form of that hurricane) Hayley ventures to find her father, who is failing to answer his phone. She soon discovers that he has had some kind of accident in the crawl space of the old family home, but that is the least of her worries, as Dave isn’t the only occupant lying under the house. Cue, giant croc. 

The screenplay allows the usual pitfalls and obstacles that stand in their way to fight for survival to appear believable, and the bond between the two leads strengthens as they literally find themselves in the foundations of their relationship, to not only find common ground, but also build/fight their way out to the top come hell or highwater. 

Hats off too to Alexandre Aja, who back in 2003 entered the horror genre with his hands firmly on the jugular with High Tension and then backed it up with the insane and gloriously over the top The Hills Have Eyes remake, before falling on the wayside with his outings since. Whether, it was working alongside Sam Raimi’s production team, Aja hits his stride once again in Crawl and positions himself as a director who can inject so much pain and torture in his characters that it’s a wonder that anyone can survive such an ordeal. The tension at times is intense and Aja, does enough to crank it to the max when it’s called for and dial it back to allow the characters and his audience to breathe.

The Diagnosis:

For its short running time of just under the 90 minute mark, Aja packs in enough grit, and determination, in this intense, blood-riddled battle for survival, that we can only enjoy the ride. 

Movie review: The Hills Have Eyes (2006)

23 Thursday Mar 2017

Posted by surgeons of horror in Wes Craven

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Alexandre Aja, Emile de Ravin, Kathleen Quinlan, Ted Levine, The Hills Have Eyes, Wes Craven

WES CRAVEN must have felt pretty proud of this adaptation from his original movie.

The Hills Have Eyes was the second movie that he made following on from Last House On The Left and was a huge success for the director, paving the way for a smashing career in the horror realm.

For the remake though, Craven would step aside from directorial duties, focusing solely on his Producer role and allow Alexandre Aja take the helm.

Aja already carved success in his own right in the genre with Furia and Haute Tension, both bloody brutal films. (The less said about Mirrors and Piranha 3D the better).

And the frenchman doesn’t shy away from the gore and mayhem in this movie, much to our delight.

After watching the screening at the Horror Movie Campout in Sydney,  was reminded of how hard-wired, crazed, and fucked up this movie is.

Having dissected the original movie in a previous podcast, yo could clearly see the same paths being plotted out by our protagonists, but this version does allow for some more freedom and exploration when it comes to the ‘mutant’ family.

Craven had always ventured out to make  a savage insight into the good and bad side of America by polarising families on the opposite side of the spectrum and pitted them against each other in a bloody war of survival.

Much of that is apparent in this version, but Aja takes that concept and ups the ante by throwing the Carter family into a world of carnage and disarray, where it is anyone’s guess who if anyone will survive.

That raw energy transcends well and it’s the perfect recipe for a thrill ride of massive proportions .

If there is a flaw, it’s that our Carter family seem a little too polished when held up against the mutant family.

There are often times when you wished that more time was spent on fleshing out the characters than actually ripping the flesh off them, but who am I kidding?

This movie is fun, all the same and provides enough shocks, all-out-gore, and ferocity that not only make it a worthy of the original, but dare I say it?

A rarity in that it adds something additional to the Craven’s vision and expands on it in a positive way.

A decent stab in the open, vast and deserted landscape.

  • Paul Farrell

Horror Movie Campout – Sydney (2017)

12 Sunday Mar 2017

Posted by surgeons of horror in Australian Horror

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Alexandre Aja, Ethan Hawke, Horror Movie Campout Sydney, Scott Derrickson, Sinister, The Hills Have Eyes, Wes Craven

WHEN I first heard about the Horror Movie Campout earlier this year, I instantly fell in love with this notion of a festival dedicated to like minded individuals all eager to have their appetite for all things blood and gore.

I had to be there and immerse myself amongst the horde and delight in the horror that lay before me.

So, I have to thank the organisers of this event for setting the stage for what was a truly awesome night ahead.

As you can see from the video below, I was pumped.

And then some.

https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fsurgeonsofhorror%2Fvideos%2F1734431099915523%2F&show_text=0&width=560

There was plenty to keep the crowd satiated, from a death chamber, side entertainments such as magicians, eating contests, and of course the bar, food trucks, laser tag, and did we mention the bar?

The main attraction though, would be two features for the night that were selected for the night by the horde themselves from a selection chosen by the Horror Movie Campout committee.

Check out our responses in the video below.

https://www.facebook.com/plugins/video.php?href=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fsurgeonsofhorror%2Fvideos%2F1734780199880613%2F&show_text=0&width=560

So that concludes our assessment of the festival.

A special nod to all the horror fans and those that came dressed to suit the occasion.

Some great cosplay action going on including Freddy, Jason, and that dastardly Michael Myers.

Bring on the next one.

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