The Gallows was written and directed by Travis Cluff and Christ Lofing.
This
appears to be the duo's first foray into Hollywood movie making. If
we're lucky, it'll be their last. Their only previous credits
were a couple of short films.
This
is another execrable found footage film, a genre which I hate with a
white hot passion, so I'm not going to waste your time and mine with an overly lengthy review. You may be wondering why, if I hate films like this so
much, I paid to see it. Because I'd already seen all of this summer's big
blockbusters and there was precious little else to go see.
Remember
when movies used to be shot on actual film instead of videotape, on sets with real production values? Remember when movies
starred actual actors instead of friends of the director? Ah, how I wish
we could go back to that time. If this is the future of filmmaking,
then these movies can go watch themselves.
How
do these awful found footage movies keep getting made year after
year? Because studios make money
off of them, that's why. No matter how poorly these films perform at the
box office, they're made so cheaply they can't help but make a
profit. The
Gallows was shot for just $100,000, and has so far grossed over $21
million. So you know what that means! Sequels, whether we want them or
not.
In
fact it seems like the creators are banking on it. They practically
pull a hamstring trying to make Charlie Grimille into the next horror
icon, ala Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees. Nice try, guys. Somehow I
don't think a high school kid dumb enough to be hanged for real during a
play quite stacks up to a knife-fingered child killer or an unstoppable
machete-weilding hulk.
The Gallows Marketing Team pulled out all the stops, going so far as using one of those "night vision trailers" to promote the film. You know, the kind where they show actual audiences shrieking and covering their eyes as they watch the movie, in a flailing attempt to convince us it's scary and worth our time.
Again, nice try. Unfortunately it's all about as scary as this.
This quote is also from the trailer. Well, I agree with half that statement.
The Gallows Marketing Team pulled out all the stops, going so far as using one of those "night vision trailers" to promote the film. You know, the kind where they show actual audiences shrieking and covering their eyes as they watch the movie, in a flailing attempt to convince us it's scary and worth our time.
Again, nice try. Unfortunately it's all about as scary as this.
This quote is also from the trailer. Well, I agree with half that statement.
The
film clocks in at a paltry 81 minutes! What a gyp! I felt like sitting
in my seat for another half hour just to get my money's worth.
SPOILERS, I GUESS
The Plot (such as it is):
In
1993, students at Beatrice High School in Beatrice, Nebraska, performed a play
called The Gallows. A student named Charlie Grimille played the lead
character, who was sentenced to be hanged. Tragedy struck when a faulty
trap door opened on the makeshift gallows, hanging Charlie for real in
full view of his co-stars and the audience.
Twenty
years later, the Beatrice drama class inexplicably decides to
commemorate this tragedy by staging the very same play (!). We're then
introduced to our small cast of characters: Ryan, a sarcastic sociopath who films the rehearsals (and as such, the movie), Reese, who's playing the
same part as Charlie Grimille, Pfiefer, the co-star and the play's
biggest champion, and Cassidy, Ryan's girlfriend.
While
goofing off, Ryan interviews a woman named Alexis Ross, who's been
attending every rehearsal. She reveals she was present at the original
play in 1993 and witnessed Charlie Grimille's death.
Reese
has no business being the star of the play,
as he's unable to project emotion or even remember his lines. He only
auditioned to impress Pfiefer, his secret crush. Ryan
resents being forced to work on the play, and realizes Reese doesn't
want to be there either. He comes up with a plan— he, Reese and Cassidy
will break into the school after hours and destroy the set, forcing the
play to be canceled. Reese initially wants nothing to do with this
plan, but eventually agrees.
The
three break in and trash the stage. They're then confronted by Pfiefer,
who demands to know what they're doing. They give her the runaround,
but she sees through their lies. Just then a loud noise spooks them, and
the four make a run for it. They discover the previously broken stage
door is now inexplicably locked. As they head back to the stage, they
see it's been completely restored, their damage undone.
The
four attempt to find a way out, but every door in the entire school is
locked, the land lines are out and they have no cell phone service.
They're effectively trapped inside the school. There's lots of running
and screaming in the dark, in a desperate attempt at eating up screen
time.
The
four find a cast photo in the school's display case (!) and discover
that Reese's father was in the original play. He apparently called in
sick, which forced Charlie Grimille to take his place. Apparently the ghost of Charlie Grimille blames Reese's dad for his death, and starts picking off the kids
one by one in revenge (why he's pissed at the other kids is apparently none of our concern).
There's lots more barely visible action, as Ryan and Cassidy are hanged by Charlie's ghost, leaving Reese and Pfiefer the only
survivors. Charlie's ghost somehow forces them to recreate the end of
the play. Reese steps up on the gallows, puts the noose around his neck
and is hanged for real, just as Charlie was. Alexis, who's been in the auditorium watching the play unfold, gives it a standing ovation and reveals she was Charlie's girlfriend back in 1993.
In
the final scene, the police enter the home of Alexis Ross and find her
combing Pfiefer's hair, as the two watch a twenty year old videotape of
Charlie Grimille's on-stage death. It's implied that Pfiefer is the
daughter of Alexis and Charlie. As a policeman call for backup, Charlie
appears and attacks him.
Thoughts:
•
I can't think of any possible reason why the school officials would ever allow this play to be staged again, especially in our current hypersensitive society, and especially after it caused the death of a cast member.
They're supposed to be "commemorating" the original production. In fact, Pfiefer even brags that the new programs use the same design as the original. I don't know... it seems like extremely poor taste to me. It's like performing a recreation
of a car wreck that killed a bunch of prom goers.
•
Supposedly Charlie Grimille was hanged when the trap door in the stage
gallows opened prematurely, before he was "ready." That means they
obviously planned to fake hang him at some point during the production.
Are you freakin' kidding me?
How was this high school drama department planning on safely simulating
a hanging in the first place? Charlie was hanged for real, so there was
no extra long, breakaway or elastic rope, or any other safety measures
built into the gallows. Who thought this was a good idea? And to top if
all off, they built the gallows the exact same way twenty years later.
Instead
of Charlie's ghost seeking revenge on Reese, he should have gone after
the idiot director who built a goddamned working gallows for a high
school play back in 1993.
•
There's not one sympathetic or likeable character in this entire film.
Ryan is a complete and utter asshole, and may even be a sociopath.
Cassidy has absolutely no redeeming qualities, willingly going along with anything Ryan suggests. Pfiefer seems unhealthily obsessed with the play.
Reese comes closest to being somewhat likable, but even he easily lies
to Pfiefer, who's supposed to be his crush.
Once
the killing started, I couldn't have been less concerned about the lives of any of
these people. Was I supposed to be rooting for Charlie Grimille?
•
At the beginning of the film we see Reese and Pfiefer rehearsing their
lines for the play. Pfiefer seems to be quite an accomplished actress,
but Reese misses his cues and struggles with his lines. He's almost
cartoonishly bad, to make sure we all get the point that he's a terrible
stage actor.
The
problem is, once the rehearsal's over, his normal "movie" acting is
every bit as bad as his "stage" acting. In fact, everyone in this film is a horrible, horrible actor. I doubt any of them could say "Hello" convincingly. That's
pretty much par for the course in found footage films though.
•
Ryan notices the stage door has a broken lock, and plans to use it to
sneak into the school after hours and vandalize the stage. All the
characters, including the drama teacher, seem to know about this broken
door, but don't seem the least bit concerned by it. I find it hard to
believe that no one's robbed this school blind before now.
•
Ryan, Reese and Cassidy sneak into the school after dark and trash the
stage. This "vandalism" sequence is extremely brutal and hard to watch, as it
consists of the group smashing a couple of pieces of prop crockery and
actually knocking over a couple of cardboard trees. Reese even uses a screwdriver to
remove the gallows stairs. Dear god... it would take the theater
department minutes to repair the vast amount of damage they caused.
•
At one point the kids walk past a display case, which prominently
displays memorabilia from the original 1993 production of The Gallows. Among the items in the case is a photo of the smiling cast, including Charlie Grimille. Why
the hell would any teacher or principal in their right mind allow this
display? "Hey everyone, look! It's a photo of that kid that died in a
horrific freak accident onstage! Look at 'im smile! He has no idea he's
only got a day or two left to live!"
•
Man, that is one elaborate high school theater! It looks more like
something you'd see on Broadway than in rural Nebraska. It's got a huge system of walkways in
the rafters that rivals that of the Paris Opera. A far cry from the
cramped auditorium stages in most schools.
•
Math is hard! The original play took place twenty years ago. It's
implied that Pfiefer is the daughter of Charlie Grimille and his
girlfriend Alexis Ross. If that's true, then wouldn't that make Pfiefer
twenty years old? Nineteen at the absolute youngest? Is she really
supposed to be a nineteen year old high school student? Maybe she
flunked third grade two or three times?
•
There's no way this story was ever going to be good, but I might have
liked it a bit more if they'd just shot is as a normal film, with real cameras and actors, instead of as a thrice-damned found footage film. As always happens in
such movies, I spent most of the movie wondering why the hell the
characters were filming everything while they're supposed to be running
for their lives.
•
There's only one truly creepy moment in the film: when Cassidy is
sobbing in the dark, the spectral image of Charlie slowly becomes visible behind her. Too bad the original Halloween already did the exact same scene almost forty years ago, and better.
There's
a tiny spark of a decent idea at the heart of The Gallows, but it's marred by
atrocious acting, non-existent production values, amateur camera work,
and unlikable characters. I give it a D.
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