In Fear
Driving, lost and tormented in the night, primal fears of the dark and the unknown give way to fear that you have let the evil in, or that it is already there.
Driving, lost and tormented in the night, primal fears of the dark and the unknown give way to fear that you have let the evil in, or that it is already there.
The trailer for the UK the psychological thriller In Fear has hit the web and now I can finally see what people have been talking about. It’s definitely a well cut, artful piece of suspense – here’s hoping the actual film can maintain that.
Directed by Jeremy Lovering, and starring Iain De Caestecker (U.K. TV show “The Fades”), Alice Englert (Beautiful Creatures), and Allen Leech (Downtown Abbey), “Driving, lost and tormented in the night, primal fears of the dark and the unknown give way to fear that you have let the evil in, or that it is already there.”
Head inside to check it out! The film comes out in the Fall in Europe, we’ll keep you apprised of a US date. READ MORE
Ryan Daley has chimed in with his thoughts on the Sundance Midnight psychological thriller In Fear, which stars Iain De Caestecker, Alice Englert, and Allen Leech driving, lost and tormented in the night, where primal fears of the dark and the unknown give way to horrible fears.
Daley explains that “Pervasive feeling of dread runs throughout the first half” of Jeremy Lovering’s pic, and that “uneasy moans from the audience could be heard as Lovering takes a seemingly benign situation and slowly tightens the screws.”
Although, he goes into explain that it loses its magic: “But midway through the movie Lovering gives us an early peek at his hole card, and the tension, so cleverly sustained until now, begins to seep away.”
Click here for the full review. The pic premiered this past Sunday, January 20, Midnight at the Egyptian Theatre in Park City as part of the Sundance Film Festival. READ MORE
A pervasive feeling of dread runs throughout the first half of In Fear, a British horror movie from filmmaker Jeremy Lovering. Uneasy moans from the audience could be heard at the Sundance Film Festival screening I attended, as Lovering takes a seemingly benign situation and slowly tightens the screws.
Tom (Iain De Caestecker) and Lucy (Alice Englert), recently acquainted, are on their way to a music festival in Ireland. After stopping at a pub, Tom convinces Lucy to spend the night at the Kilairney House, an old hotel that’s supposedly somewhere nearby. Signs for the Kilairney House direct the couple through a maze of country roads. As the signs lead them in circles, Tom and Lucy begin to suspect that someone is messing with them. Before they know it, they’re hopelessly lost. The sun is setting. And they’re almost out of petrol.
It’s in the early going that Lovering really piles on a sense of foreboding. At a Sundance Film Festival Q&A he told the audience that the actors were unaware of the plot before shooting In Fear, that they weren’t given a script or a story. Lovering wanted to capture the actors’ genuine reactions, so he placed them in a harrowing situation, set up a few scares, and let the cameras roll. This “Blair Witch” approach pays off in the first half of In Fear, especially as Lucy begins to break down. Her fear is legit, and ultimately contagious.
But midway through the movie Lovering gives us an early peek at his hole card, and the tension, so cleverly sustained until now, begins to seep away. As the fear of the unknown is replaced with the fear of something more tangible, the movie loses its power. This may be the result of Lovering’s filmmaking style, which had him shooting 50 hours of improvisation and compiling In Fear in the editing bay. Perhaps if the movie was reedited to place the reveal closer to the end, Lovering could have goosed the tension even further. It’s hard to tell. These creative decisions don’t necessarily ruin In Fear, which remains a solid thriller with some hand-wringing moments. But by abandoning the tone he so carefully sets in the first half, Lovering misses out on making something great.
The first clip from the psychological thriller In Fear has gone online and features a road strip going south. Unfortunately, the first piece of footage is nothing more than a fake scare and some atmosphere.
Directed by Jeremy Lovering, and starring Iain De Caestecker (U.K. TV show “The Fades”), Alice Englert (Beautiful Creatures), and Allen Leech (Downtown Abbey), “Driving, lost and tormented in the night, primal fears of the dark and the unknown give way to fear that you have let the evil in, or that it is already there.”
The pic will premiere this coming Sunday, January 20, Midnight at the Egyptian Theatre in Park City as part of the Sundance Film Festival. READ MORE
Bloody Disgusting has landed the official festival one-sheet for the chilling psychological thriller In Fear, starring Iain De Caestecker (U.K. TV show “The Fades”), Alice Englert (Beautiful Creatures), and Allen Leech (Downtown Abbey).
Directed by Jeremy Lovering, “Driving, lost and tormented in the night, primal fears of the dark and the unknown give way to fear that you have let the evil in, or that it is already there.”
The pic will premiere this coming Sunday, January 20, Midnight at the Egyptian Theatre in Park City as part of the Sundance Film Festival. READ MORE
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