Wednesday, April 27, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: Holidays (2016)

Image result for holidays 2016 movie poster
Holidays (2016)

Horror Anthology

When it comes to the horror genre, a short film can be just as effective as a full length feature. This is why the genre has lent itself so well to the anthology style of filmmaking, in which you segment the film into a collection of short films connected by a common theme. In recent years horror anthology fans have been spoiled with these films and the newest of the bunch, a film called Holidays, keeps that ball rolling. Bringing together nine talented genre filmmakers this movies tells eight different tales set on eight different holidays, each capturing the spirit of their set day of the year. 

The film moves in chronological order so it opens with a tale of true love on Valentine's day, but this isn't your typical love story. Written and directed by Kevin Kolsch & Dennis Widmyer, Valentine's Day gives "Organ donor" a whole new meaning and is a confident and strong start to the anthology. From there we move into every drunks favorite holiday, St. Patrick's Day and although I found this to be the weakest segment of the bunch Gary Shore still manages to find some cool themes to center in on and shed some new light on the Irish holiday.

Nicolas McCarthy had the task of bringing horror to Easter and to do so he decided to focus on one of children's biggest questions surrounding the holiday, What is the Easter bunny and why does it exist? His story blends the mythology of the easter bunny with the faith based beliefs to create a creepy, clever take on an otherwise bright and shiny holiday. The film moves from there into Mother's Day, written & directed by Sarah Adina Smith this offers a new take on the "spawn of satan" as we follow a young girl who gets pregnant every time she has intercourse. 

The back half of Holidays is where the film really flourishes with Father's Day and Halloween, the next two, being the strongest of them all. Starting with the former, written and directed by Anthony Scott Burns, Father's Day is the short that will stick with you the longest after the film has ended. He tells you everything while showing nothing and when it's over you will find your mind racing to put the pieces together and figure out what exactly you just saw. You won't have much time though as the follow up Halloween story takes a drastic change in tone and story as it is written and directed by none other than Kevin Smith. Putting in some of his best work of recent memory he creates a totally original revenge thriller that is modern and relevant to the times. 

The film ends as each year does, by celebrating Christmas and New years and neither leave you disappointed. Scott Stewart's Christmas celebration asks a question many of us have been pondering with the technology looming, What would Virtual-reality mean for us? When a young father makes a difficult life decision to procure this technology for his son we get a small glimpse into what that could look like. While that story may leave you slightly bummed out the finale will send you off with a sinister grin on your face. Directed by Adam Egypt Mortimer and written by Kevin Kolsch & Dennis Widmyer this short sets you up for a by-the-books kidnap and torture story until a small plot twist sends this into a blood filled battle that will be sure to leave you satisfied in the end.

As far as horror anthologies go, Holidays is about as strong of one as you can get. With just about every short hitting its mark and leaving the viewer satisfied you cant ask for much more from short form horror. As an added bonus it is also a horror film that fits the season for just about every holiday, and as any horror fan knows there is nothing better than seasonal horror. My only question is what the hell does this genre have against Thanksgiving? 

Image result for holidays 2016 movie

As always, thanks for reading and I am Zach Who Watches Movies. You can find me anytime on twitter @ZachWWMovies, smell ya later!



No comments:

Post a Comment