Review: The Breach
3 years ago
61
Text © Richard Gary / Indie Horror Films, 2023Images from the Internet
The Breach
Directed by Rodrigo Gudiño
Hanger 18 Media; Lightbulb Distribution; Raven Banner Entertainment; Strike
Media
93 minutes, 2022 / 2023
www.strike-media
https://lightbulbfilmdistribution.com/
This film is so Canadian,
it should come with maple cookies (they are so good, eh). It takes place
in the small town of Lone Crow, in Northern Ontario (filmed in lovely Parry
Sound, Ontario).
Based on the novel by Nick
Cutter and screenplay written by Cutter and Ian Weir, the main protagonist is
the Chief of Police, John “Hawk” Hawkins (Allan Hawco, main character in the
series “Republic of Doyle,” 2010-2014), who is one week from retirement (of
course). Was his last name derived from the original version of the Canadian group,
The Band, known as The Hawks?
Allan Hawco, Mary Antonini
Speaking of bands, the executive
producer this film was Slash from Guns 'N Roses who also supervised the score.
And there is more relative to the music world, but I will get to that later.
In a well-done pre-credit epilogue,
much like a television show, it takes place on the same day as the post-credit
film starts, rather than years before. This is actually refreshing for a film.
In this way we are introduced to officer Connie Parks (underutilized Mary
Antonini) and appropriately named coroner Jacob Redgrave (Wesley French). The
coroner is there to check out the body of physics professor Cole Parsons (Adam
Kenneth Wilson) that is found, but I will not give out the gruesome details,
though we get to see it pretty up-close.
Emily Alatalo
This leads Hawk, Jacob,
and guide/tracker/ex-girlfriend of Hawk and previously Jake (no tension there,
right?) Meg Fullbright (Emily Alatalo) to head north into the bush to Links
Creek on the Porcupine River to find out what happened to Parsons. This leads,
naturally in these days of technology, to the overhead drone shot of the lone car
on roads surrounded by forest or a boat on a narrow river, with a somber music
soundtrack.
While the trio are off on
their adventures, Parks (as in parks her butt in the station) holds down the
fort, garnishing information on Zoom from a conspiracy-minded friend, Alex (Alex
Lifeson; yes, the guitarist from Canadian musical juggernauts, Rush).
Wesley French
The house is abandoned and
looks great for those of us who like deserted buildings that are on their last
legs; they are fun to photograph. But there is something going on in this house: doors seem to close or unlock by
themselves. The soundtrack does well to emphasize the eeriness and creepiness
of the joint.
It gets even stranger with
the appearance of Cole’s PTSD-affected wife, Linda Parsons (Natalie Brown), and
another unexpected guest, as relationships unrealistically develop. And there
is a spooky shadow on the wall… Parts of the upcoming plot points are easy to guess,
though the steps to that are thankfully murky until they are revealed.
There is a bunch of films
reflected in The Breach, such as From Beyond (1986), Bite
(2016), Night of the Living Dead (1968), and especially The Fly (1986),
one scene in particular. And yet, there is so much more. I have often
theorized that when enough pre-used ideas are combined right, it creates
something new-ish. In this case it also includes numerous genres, such as police
procedural, body horror, sci-fi, cabin in the woods, and one that was
unexpected. This has its foot in many different ones, keeping it coherent – not
an easy task as previous attempts have shown – satisfying tick boxes in all of
them successfully.
The relationships between
certain characters are common to give it a “human” touch and possibly to make
the characters more likeable, of course, but are completely superfluous to the
actual story and burn up time and distract. Sort of like Hooper’s affair with
Ellen Brody in Peter Benchley’s book, Jaws, which wisely never made it
to the screen; it just did not matter to what was going on, narratively. This
is my one gripe, so not bad at all.
Natalie Brown
I must say the film visually
looks great, from the cinematography by award-winning Eric Oh, to the set
designs. The blood and gore are fabulous, and the prosthetics and make-up effects
by Daniel Baker and Chris Cooper are not the same old same old.
With the power of talent
here, much from the world of television, it is no surprise that the acting is
spot on. In the out-of-context department, it seems a lot of the cast has
appeared, at some point on Canadian police procedural “Hudson and Rex” (a guilty
pleasure of my own).
Alex Lifeson (on Zoom)
The director, Rodrigo
Gudiño, is the founding editor and publisher of the Canadian horror fiction magazine
Rue Morgue, and this may not be his first time behind the lens, but it is his first feature
length release. An excellent start.
The Breach is available on Sky Store, Virgin Media, AppleTV,
Google Play, and Amazon.
IMDB listing HERE
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