Hellions : Movie Review


Hellions (2015) - Movie PosterIt is a normal Halloween for 17-year-old Dora Vogel (Chloe Rose) until it's suddenly not. A checkup at Dr. Henry's (Rossif Sutherland) office leads to unthinkable news: she's four weeks pregnant. With the realities of adulthood breathing down Dora's neck, she is faced with tough decisions and the scary prospect of telling her mom (Rachel Wilson) and boyfriend Jace (Luke Bilyk) on the very night when spooky fun and frivolity should be the name of the game. Adding more stress to the situation are the masked trick-or-treaters who come knocking as she readies herself to go out with Jace for the evening. These demonic darlings want far more than candy from Dora, and they're not about to leave until they've claimed her and her unborn child as their own.

A young woman's loss of innocence coincides with a holiday-set nightmare in "Hellions," director Bruce McDonald (2009's "Pontypool") and screenwriter Pascal Trottier's (2013's "The Colony") affectionate ode to All Hallows' Eve. The opening act is its best; McDonald and cinematographer Norayr Kasper's painterly visual eyes bring all the autumnal flavor one would expect from a film revolving around the last night of October. From the pumpkin patch nestled behind Dora's house to the costumed residents and decorations sprinkled throughout the idyllic small town, the picture sets up a sumptuous atmosphere that only grows riskier as Dora's life changes in an instant. Playing someone who is scared and vulnerable and (as teens are sometimes apt to be) a little selfish, Chloe Rose (TV's "Degrassi: The Next Generation") brings a sympathetic honesty to her heroine of Dora. Even as the narrative falls deeper into out-there abstraction, Rose anchors the eccentric goings-on.


See Dustin Putman, TheFilmFile.com. for full review

Author : Dustin Putman, TheFilmFile.com.