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‘The Banished’ Review – Cryptic Australian Horror-Thriller Gets Lost in the Woods

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The Banished Review

“Terror is a place.” That ambiguous tagline for Joseph Sims-Dennett’s The Banished reflects the film’s imprecise and ungraspable attempt at woodland horrors. Think Sator, The Interior, or last year’s Lovely, Dark, and Deep. One character’s venture into uninhabited forestation doubles as a psychological excavation of repressed traumas and hidden fears. Sims-Dennett tries to rearchitect nature’s quietest landscapes as an unknown purgatory, but this is where he fails. The Banished is never forthcoming with its messages or intentions, leaving audiences struggling to find any direction, like a lost hiker without cell service, a map, or a compass.

Meg Clarke stars as protagonist Grace Jennings, a woman drowning in despair. Her father recently passed, her brother David (Gautier de Fontaine) is missing, and David’s last whereabouts harbor a dark secret. With the help of her old teacher, Mr. Green (Leighton Cardno), Grace is led into the surrounding woods in search of David. What she finds is, well, an unfathomable and threatening journey. That much you can presume since you’re reading this review on Bloody Disgusting.

The Banished

If that sounds underbaked, bingo. The Banished leans on the presentation of a fractured timeline to hopefully convince audiences that Grace’s experience is far more complicated than reality. Not a whole lot happens in terms of action, because Sims-Dennett is obsessed with artsy montages of silver-painted dead bodies, Sam Powyer’s abstract cinematography, and imagery meant to reflect Grace’s unsettled mind. The story unnecessarily jumps around in chronology to—fingers crossed—spice up the one-woman hike, but it’s an overused technique that undermines basic narrative functionality. Substance evaporates as pretension rolls in like a haze-coating fog, trumped by a mindless parade of clip-show photography that supersedes structure and development.

Ideas are a jumble of quick hits, but even worse, leave anticipated frights behind. The Banished is not a scary movie, nor does Grace convey palpable paranoia. Sims-Dennett wrestles with domestic issues as driving themes—the hurdles we leap over for family versus the scars left by loved ones—but it’s a pointless, or at least unaware, examination. Tauese Tofa’s droning score moans through scene after scene of Grace wandering down branch-covered trails, desperately trying to summon an iota of tension that never appears. There are scary elements, from bloodshed to culty teases, but they’re never employed scarily. It’s not just Grace who is clueless, but Sims-Dennett seems unaware of how to navigate the horror genre.

Masked person in The Banished

If there’s a bright spot, it’s Clarke. She’s a competent lead who stomachs her character’s emotional burdens. Grace is plagued by typical obstacles of outdoorsy thrillers, from sustained injuries to odd noises while camping at night, and Clarke’s reactions are on point. Issues arise not because of her empowered yet unprepared performance, but Sims-Dennett’s undefinable vision. There’s a difference between filmmakers refusing to spoon-feed audiences and movies that lose their own plots to mindless self-indulgence.

It’s a shame, because you can sense that Sims-Dennett pulls The Banished from a personal profundity that doesn’t translate. Cinema should be expressive and painful, yet also relatable and decipherable. The Banished leaves audiences climbing a mountain of questions after an especially head-scratching third act, like Sims-Dennett forgets that we’re not telepathically tethered to explanations and motivations in his head. Sadly, we’re left with a deceptively shallow and unthoughtful take on “trauma horror” that leaves viewers begging for clarity that doesn’t exist.

The Banished is now available on VOD and in select theaters.

2 skulls out of 5

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‘Hungry’ Review – Finally, a Film Brave Enough to Call Out Hippos for the Monsters They Truly Are

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Hungry Review

When it comes to the animal attack subgenre of horror, there’s a hierarchy of sorts with the wildlife in question. Killer shark movies are easily the most ubiquitous, while alligators/crocodiles, dogs, bears, and snakes probably lead the rest of the pack.

It’s often worth paying attention, though, when a filmmaker targets a more atypical animal threat, including the likes of Jonathan King’s Black Sheep or Juan Piquer Simón’s Slugs. A new contender rumbles its way onto the screen this month, and while we all grew up thinking hippos are rotund cuties, the truth is far more frightening – this hippo is Hungry.

Sistine (Madison Davenport) and her best friend, Hannah (Olivia Bernstone), are enjoying a vacation in New Orleans, hoping to drown out their troubles back home. They sign up for an early morning bayou tour known for its alligator sightings and are joined by four other tourists and the boat’s skipper, Rodrigo (Michel Curiel). An uneventful trip sees Rodrigo take the group off the beaten path, but when an animal in the water capsizes their boat, the group finds themselves trapped in the swamp by something unexpected and deadly.

It’s a hippo. There’s a hippo in the bayou, and it’s not happy about all these pesky people.

From Joy Houck’s Creature from Black Lake to Walter Hill’s Southern Comfort to Adam Green’s Hatchet, the movies have warned us time and again not to go into the swampy bayous of Louisiana. Those cautionary tales are appreciated, though, as bigfoot, inbred hicks, and undead serial killers are a very real threat. But hippos? In the bayou? Well, that just seems silly.

And yet, Hungry plays its blubbery, big-toothed threat with deadly seriousness, and it’s all the better for it. “But Rob,” I can already hear some of you saying, “just yesterday you reviewed the new shark attack film, Chum, and said it suffered from taking itself too seriously. What gives?” For one thing, you’re misquoting me, but more importantly, the reference there was more of an observation on the animal attack subgenre successes as a whole. The “fun” ones tend to succeed more often than their more serious counterparts, but a dramatic and thrilling time can still be found with filmmakers who know what they’re doing.

Chum may be serious, but it’s also poorly written/performed, lacking in any degree of tension, devoid of personality, and so on. By contrast, Hungry lets its suspense build on the backs of engaging characters, good performances, and believable writing. Only one of its ensemble is obnoxious – a major feat for this kind of film – but even then, their motivations are both well-written and understandable.

The rest of the characters are people you’d be happy to see survive the night, and rather than looking forward to the next kill, director James Nunn and his cast leave us uncertain and nervous about who’s going to go belly up. The nervous business traveler wanting to get back to her kids? The family of three celebrating lost loved ones while on their vacation? Joaquim de Almeida’s Walker, an old hunter, is introduced saying, “The only cute hippo is a dead hippo,” so you pretty much know where he’ll end up.

To that end, the film teases out its hippo’s first appearance until well into the ninety-minute running time. We get ripples and splashes, but it’s only around the midway point that we get our first real look at the beast, and it looks fantastic. Nunn goes on to show the hippo in all its glory, and it’s a convincing antagonist brought to life through practical prosthetic effects and digital work. From the ear twitches to the beast’s giant maw opening wide with awe and malice, the hippo’s presence feels part of the action. There’s a tangible nature to it, something practical effects excel at while digital effects sometimes fail to convince of, and both succeed here with quality work from all involved.

While we get brief exteriors early on and some visually appealing drone shots, the bulk of the film unfolds on what looks to be a highly believable, set-dressed water tank (but could very well be an actual location, in which case, kudos to the team). It’s wholly convincing as a section of the bayou, complete with shoulder-high water and arching, twisting trees emerging into the sky. The film was shot in Malta, which is, coincidentally, where Chum was filmed as well.

Nunn, who also wrote Hungry, is now ten films deep into a fairly interesting career as a genre filmmaker. He’s made four movies with Scott Adkins, three of which are certified action bangers (with 2016’s Eliminators in particular being an underrated gem). He dipped a toe into the animal attack subgenre back in 2022 with the aforementioned Shark Bait, and it’s clear he learned some lessons from that endeavor, as its first hour is an engaging, attractively shot feature that sinks fast as soon as its poorly rendered shark becomes a lead character. Hungry improves on every aspect of that film, with its biggest step up being in regard to the effects.

If there’s an area or two where Hungry lacks bite, it’s in both its gore and its ending. There are numerous kills here, but the nature of the attacks and the choices made by Nunn mean none of them result in gory assaults or outcomes. We’re shown the torn apart corpse of an alligator early on, but most of the human kills see them attacked and dragged underwater, leaving nothing but a blood spill behind. Similarly, while the ending encounter satisfies, it still feels like it should have been a bigger confrontation. Neither of these aspects really hurt the film, but a bolstering of the gore and ending antics would have definitely upped the film’s ultimate entertainment value and rewatchability.

When all is said and done, Hungry is a genuinely solid animal attack film that succeeds in making its creature threat thrilling, entertaining, and, dare I say, educational? Title notwithstanding, the film acknowledges that hippos are vegetarians, meaning the five hundred or so people they kill every year – a true fact! – are slaughtered not out of hunger, but out of spite, self-defense, or a desire to play “land orca” while tossing around us fragile humans like we’re little more than seals in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Characters are grounded and engaging, the film moves well between suspense, character beats, and action, and the effects used to bring the hippo to life are highly effective and never feel like distractions. Drop those expectations of a Hungry Hungry Hippo romp, and settle in for a terrific little survival thriller about an angry, angry hippo instead.

Chomp chomp.

Hungry releases in select theaters today, June 3, before arriving on VOD on June 23, 2026.

3 skulls out of 5

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