The conceit of the genre film which disguises something real arises again in this scattershot but endearingly earnest effort from Emmerdale star Dominic Brunt, which opens with the flickering image of a BBFC certificate for one Crimson Manor before cutting to a rural landscape beneath a blood moon. The local pub is called the Blue Moon, and that’s where we first meet two of the characters, who are warned by the locals that it’s dangerous for them to be out of doors at this time of night, and offered a box of supernaturally-focused protective gear. Naturally they suspect the Crimson Manor director, Peter (Stephen Mapes) of setting this up, and they make every effort to attribute what they hear and see en route to the set in the same way.
On the set, Peter does not seem to be in the mood for jokes, irritated as he is by all the.
On the set, Peter does not seem to be in the mood for jokes, irritated as he is by all the.
- 8/29/2022
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
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