Tag Archives: Shudder

Birth/Rebirth Review


In a film about medicine and surgery, the concepts of rules and codes of conduct are questioned. In Birth/Rebirth, the experimental aspects are astounding and lethally inviting. It is a psychologically suspenseful film that becomes an acquired taste.While watching Birth/Rebirth, I reflected upon just how far the risks of unethical conduct can go. In this film, time is of the essence. Director Laura Moss explores meaning through realism in her direction of Birth/Rebirth.

The film focuses on Rose (played by Marin Ireland) who is a morgue technician. Rose does her own operations outside of her medical office, many of which cross legal boundaries. Then there is Celie (played by Judy Reyes), a hospital employee and a mother. Her daughter Lila (played by A.J. Lister) gets terminally sick. Rose decides to take Lila into her home as her experiment. Celie discovers Rose’s bizarre and questionable operations on her daughter. Rose is keeping Lila alive by harvesting biological materials. This leads Celie and Rose to work together to save Lila’s life. However, what they are doing is morally wrong.

When the movie gets into Rose’s self-directed operations, the attention-grabbing suspense of this movie really starts to get twisted. This is because Rose’s home is filled with bizarre studies. One includes a hog that has died, but Rose has restored its life. Now Rose is trying to revive Lila’s life, and Celie is playing the assistant in all of Rose’s operations.

There are times where medical practices, surgeries, and treatments are questioned in the film. There are also consistent errors being made. While working together with Celie, the risks Rose is taking only make her critical thinking worse. Celie realizes this. Also, her daughter, Lila, exhibits weird signs and reactions to the treatments. There are various negative responses to the operations which is not surprising since they’re medically not right. Of course, Rose is not one to turn down taking risks as she is driven to accomplish the impossible in her career as a morgue technician.

Can Celie continue to work with Rose and save Lila? The cinematography remains neutral and keeps its darkness throughout the entirety of Birth/Rebirth. It creates a vibe that supports the film’s subject matter. While viewers sense that although things are wrong, it is a struggle to be undone. There is also a backdrop of questioning what is ethical and non-ethical. All these factors allow Birth/Rebirth to keep its flow of a creating a chilling experience. It is bizarre, but also cleverly creative and one of the best horror films I have seen. There is originality and purpose in this story which even leads to finding a path of new beginnings.

How grotesque is Birth/Rebirth? How many theories support the saving of Lila’s life? Is there a key to a better treatment? If Lila is saved, can she live a normal life? How will Rose and Celie be impacted by their operations? All these answers may come with consequences. Three and a half out of four stars for Birth/Rebirth.

Skinamarink Review


Experimental scary films have always fascinated me. Movies where the scary aspects are hidden or around corners and the jump scares come out of nowhere. Skinamarink is that type of horror film and is one of the most creative and intense films I have experienced in a long time. The camera is shaky, the cinematography is saturated, and the terror is blended with the sound effects throughout its hour and a half plus running time. Skinamarink required me to think and anticipate unexpected moments of terror. It takes the cake in its brilliant writing, directing, and settings created from the mind of director Kyle Edward Ball.

The estimated budget of Skinamarink falls at $15,000 which is relatively low. However, for its low budget, it is surreal. Ball really put his mind into making this project creative, fascinating, and something different. He worked to make a memorable film where his audience leaves with many questions in the back of their minds. I am still pondering some questions after experiencing Skinamarink. Despite some confusion throughout the film, I was astonished by the film overall.

Skinamarink is a film that takes place entirely in a house. The credits of the film roll before the movie begins and then it jumps right into its setting. Do not expect to sit after the credits. The film consists of a family in a home. There is the mom and dad (played by Jaime Hill and Ross Paul), and their children Kevin and Kaylee (played by Lucas Paul and Dali Rose Tetreault). Do not expect to see much of them but expect to hear their voices. The film’s focus is that Kevin and Kaylee wake up and realize that their parents are missing, their windows are gone, their doors are gone, and because of their ages they do not understand what is going on.

The film has that feeling of a glitchy camera which adds to the film’s suspense. There is no scoring or terrifying music, just the consistent shots of the low-budget camera following the quiet suspense. This means that there is some supernatural terror going on in the home. The supernatural terror paces itself in long fragments and focuses in on the many corners of the home. There are sound effects in the background, including a TV, the voices of the children, and whatever noise may be occurring in the house. Given all this, Skinamarink may make some feel scared. It reminded me what it felt like to be scared at a young age, especially when you don’t yet understand how the world works.

The film’s saturated cinematography is like The Blair Witch Project (1999) in that it effectively utilizes technicalities for added suspense. Skinamarink has the camera be more still and does not have its audience feel like they have motion sickness like The Blair Witch Project did. Skinamarink is a horror film with a limited budget made with the purpose of scaring the audience and finding questions about the source of the evil that lurks through the film. Where did Kevin and Kaylie’s parents go? Why did their windows and doors disappear? Why is the film being presented through a video camera? The many questions to Skinamarink’s creative use of mind-boggling technicalities are where its realism is truly demonstrated.

Skinamarink is intriguing and inviting. The film may start in a boring way given the credits rolling before the film starts instead of at the end of the film. After that, however, it grasps your attention as horrors evolve when the many terrors come out of nowhere. Skinamarink is Paranormal Activity on acid and in my opinion is better than the Paranormal Activity franchise. This one puts its horror to the test, and it is a revelation.

Is there light in Skinamarink? Is there a way to prevent the horror that is happening silently? Will Kevin and Kaylie be safe? Skinamarink is imaginative in its display of ghost knowledge as it reveals more unknown fragments of unexplained spirits. Three and a half stars for Skinamarink.