Studio: Shudder
Director: Damian Mc Carthy
Writer: Damian Mc Carthy
Producer: Justin Hyne
Stars: Jonathan French, Leila Sykes, Ben Caplan
Review Score:
Summary:
A drifter with amnesia accepts a strange job watching over a mentally ill woman, but is forced to wear a chained harness that restricts his movement throughout her dilapidated island home.
Review:
Moe Barrett has an unusual proposition for his friend Isaac, a down-on-his-luck drifter suffering from selective amnesia. Isaac needs money and Moe needs someone to watch his niece Olga, an adult orphan whose psychological troubles sometimes spur spontaneous bouts of catatonia. Olga supposedly isn’t hard to handle though. Moe assures Isaac that in all likelihood, his weekend will be uneventful since Isaac and Olga will be alone in a dilapidated old house with no one around to disturb them.
That’s because Olga’s mother weirdly went missing several months ago and her father shot himself in the head with a crossbow. The rundown family home is also the only structure on a lonely little island, which Isaac really wished Moe had told him about beforehand since Isaac can’t swim.
There’s another caveat Moe conveniently left out before bringing Isaac to the house. Olga has a fear of people coming into her room, or coming close to her at all, so Isaac has to be locked into a sleepwalking harness whose chain restricts where he can go. Isaac balks at every bizarre “by the way” Moe adds to the job description, especially this one, but what choice does a desperate man have other than to say yes?
As suspense film setups go, “Caveat” comes at you with a right proper cracker. Like Isaac, pish-poshing viewers might look at the premise and think, “Oh, c’mon. This is ridiculous. What weirdo would willingly lock themselves in a harness, in a haunted-looking house, on an inescapable island with a brain-scrambled woman they’ve never met before?”
Much faster than one might think however, you readily buy into this peculiar concept because the isolated Irish atmosphere is so eerily intoxicating. A crumbling house with rust-stained walls. An indeterminate time period. Pained people with problematic backgrounds. Mesmeric music. “Caveat” seems to take place in a dreary limbo somewhere between vague reality and Silent Hill. Almost immediately the movie entices its audience to ignore disbelief so they can be swallowed whole by an uneasily hypnotic setting.
“Caveat” continues cranking up creepiness in small yet regular doses of dread as Isaac’s situation grows dangerously stranger. The Energizer bunny has nothing on the drumming rabbit doll that doubles as the film’s unofficial mascot. Isaac’s nerves are wracked well enough by tangible oddities such as this toy, not to mention Olga’s fits where she suddenly sits like a ‘See No Evil’ statue. Then echoing sounds of laughter, faint tugs on his chain, and a seemingly possessed painting suggest paranormal threats might be in play too.
“Caveat” travels a long way on the strength of richly cinematic atmosphere. However, momentum becomes stuck in some mud once most of the plot’s pieces are fully exposed. “Caveat” casually curves into its final act at a very low speed, and finds itself fighting to fill those minutes with meaningful scenes as a result. Aside from this skid where limited substance stretches so thin that the previously tense pace pops from repetitive dullness, “Caveat” otherwise moves with remarkable swiftness for a slow-burn creeper.
The only reason “Caveat” doesn’t win an unconditional recommendation is because its conclusion wobbles around on unstable narrative ground. As the mystery unfolds, your imagination writes a long list of devilish possibilities regarding what’s really going on. To a moderate degree of dissatisfaction, the murky truth the movie ultimately reveals doesn’t come close to being as intriguing as what your own mind mulls. After pouring the foundation for a uniquely unsettling thriller, “Caveat” strays into an angle better suited for arthouse interpretation than truly horrific implications.
I haven’t investigated the movie’s ‘Making Of’ backstory, but I’d believe it if someone said at least part of the script was improvised. “Caveat” can’t withstand much “refrigerator logic” scrutiny, as its story seems to change previously established plot points on the fly, and doesn’t hold up as tightly-tied fiction when the puzzle is finally put together.
Ignoring shaky late-stage storytelling, “Caveat” capably coughs up macabre moodiness and sinister suggestiveness like few low-budget fright films can. On somewhat of a shoestring, writer/director Damian Mc Carthy puts together a visually impressive chamber chiller with just three actors in one location without ever cheating viewers into feeling like they have to mentally make up for resource-restricted shortcomings. Once any dust of disappointment settles, “Caveat” still comes out near the top of the pack for Emerald Isle indie horror.
Review Score: 70
At least the movie only runs 70 minutes, though I suppose that extra 10 technically disqualifies it from being a literal amateur hour.