All I knew about this 2017 movie when I sat down to watch it in 2020 was that it was a horror movie. And that is, in itself, more than sufficient to make me have an interest in watching a movie.
I hadn't even heard about director Marcel Sarmiento's movie "Totem" before 2020 when I happened to stumble upon it by random chance.
I must say that the movie had potential, and it definitely scores some points for being different, whereas it could very easily just have followed that classic how-to-make-a-horror movie formula. But while the movie does differ in its contents than most other horror movies of the same type, the movie just failed to deliver on the entertainment bits. Sure, the movie was watchable, but when the movie can to an end, I was left with a feeling of 'was that really it?'.
The acting in the movie was good, and for me it is always nice to see new talents on the screen, and I can't claim to have been familiar with anyone starring or acting in "Totem", so that also does count for something.
For a horror movie, then "Totem" wasn't overly impressive. It was more of a thriller than it was a horror movie. I sat down to watch "Totem" with the expectation of it being a horror movie, so I was somewhat disappointed in that aspect.
The movie makes little use of CGI, so this wasn't a movie that was heavily reliant on CGI effects to bedazzle the audience. There was some, and they were actually good enough for the movie.
"Totem", however, just felt incomplete, as if something very crucial to the mixture was missing. I can't say what it was, but I feel like the movie came in short. It felt like director Marcel Sarmiento set out to want to accomplish a bit too many things all at the same time, but managing to deliver only on a handful of them. And that is why I am rating it four out of ten stars.