Saturday, April 18, 2026

Film Review: Skinamarink (2022)

It’s hard to have a film that is practically faceless, but not impossible, as Skinamarink shows. This highly experimental horror takes the idea of space and personality, only to twist both into something so uncanny that it cannot do anything but stick in your mind. But does this make the film great? For me, it’s impossible to say, as the process of watching for me was just as boring, and it was terrifyingly memorable. 

The film’s premise involves two kids, aged four and six, waking up in their home in the middle of the night. Their father is missing, and all of the doors and windows of the same house are gone too. In the preceding hours and days, we get an experience that is not just survival of those unable to care for themselves, but something horrifically transcended. 

The problem is that this experience elongates through time almost to infinity. Endlessly long shots of corridors and room corners, kids whose faces are (almost) never shown, and a pressing design of eerie soundscapes all build into a cumbersome watching process. If the film lacks anything, it is that power to immerse the viewers in its strange rhythm. Similarly, low-budget, experimental films like Come True do that almost miraculously. Skinamarink struggles with it nearly from the beginning. 

The film’s writer and director, Kyle Edward Ball, clearly made film history with this work of art. It’s so unusual and impactful that it will leave few in any other state than adoration or complete rejection. Yet, I can’t stop myself from believing that with a more immersive setup and a clearer drive for its obscured narrative, Skinamarink could have been one of the best horrors in the past decade.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Film Review: The Long Walk (2025)

 

There's some truly deep cinematic magic in the way Francis Lawrence can make things ordinarily extraordinary. His first film, Constantine, did this quite literally, but his latest, another adaptation of a great literary work, returns to this topic. This time he does it from a completely different angle that is anything but magical. In the alternate contemporary world of Stephen King, a group of teenage boys begins a challenge where they need to walk continuously, getting shot by their military escort if they slow down, until only one remains.

This stripped-down version of so many Battle Royale tales is here much more visceral. King's novel is a minimalist masterpiece of absolute doom and this sense of being stuck in a hell of one's own choosing. The film fatefully adapts this notion into a film that keeps going, even though its cast struggles to fill the worn, bloody shows of the much more impactful individuals from the book. Lawrence solves the problem of limited time and exposure by focusing on the constant movement of both characters and the plot. 

With that, The Long Walk is a film that probably broke the record of lines being said by actors in motion and with it, made a disturbing work of art about grim perseverance. That perseverance doesn’t let up even when it fails to make anything or anyone anything but dead. But, that's ultimately also the story of life itself, isn't it?