IMDb RATING
5.5/10
7.5K
YOUR RATING
An agoraphobic father teams up with a renegade priest to save his daughter from the clutches of a gang of twisted feral children who committed an act of violence against his family years ear... Read allAn agoraphobic father teams up with a renegade priest to save his daughter from the clutches of a gang of twisted feral children who committed an act of violence against his family years earlier.An agoraphobic father teams up with a renegade priest to save his daughter from the clutches of a gang of twisted feral children who committed an act of violence against his family years earlier.
- Awards
- 11 wins & 7 nominations total
Jake Warren Wilson
- Danny
- (as Jake Wilson)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
From the Irish and Scottish film boards a nice gritty horror that plays out like a great short story. Quite creepy with solid main performances from Cosmo (Braveheart and Game of Thrones) a world class actor and newcomer Barnard. This reminds me of another similarly gritty Celtic collaboration. A great Urban horror set in dangerous Scottish estates abandoned it seems by police and society where fear breeds. The agoraphobia of the main character is done well I thought and that different angle and its subsequent analogy of escaping from the hopeless forgotten edges of society added another dimension to the main character. Cosmo is great as always as the unorthodox priest and you'll not be seeing him waving about any bibles trying to dispossess anyone. The only complaint I will make is a scene which isn't really essential in which some dodgy CGI is employed. The main character might look a bit over made up in his attempt to look like a sleep deprived fear driven man, but otherwise I really enjoyed this film done on an extremely modest budget displaying just how to make a modern urban horror.
Although this film was made thanks to sponsorship from the Irish film board, it is far from a piece of Catholic dogma. The character who plays the priest renounces religion entirely and the film's horror is an original and recent addition to the genre. It's full of good ideas and can be related to relatively recent phenomena; the urban sprawl and the creation of enormous flatblocks outside city centres, prevalent across the United Kingdom. Most frighteningly perhaps it represents the disaffected youth who hide themselves from the enormous collection of security cameras which dictate their life. Spawns of drug selling youth hide their identity behind hoodies; who'd have guessed 20 years ago that being approached by a group of youth wearing tracksuits would be such a menacing phenomenon. In this film creative use is made of this fear. The film is far from perfect, but most important is its originality, fear is created the way it should be, as suspense, and the implication of the horror created by its themes don't require an enormous spilling of blood or disgusting special effects to disquiet and disturb you. I'm glad I saw this film; it proves again that truly good additions to the genre, don't originate from Hollywood and don't require its approval to be made.
Honestly, I love the whole concept and the story. The thing I found so difficult to watch was the main character, Tommy Cowley. Granted he's agoraphobic, but I'm a bit irritated with such weak characters, especially when they're men. So you'd better have a lot of patience for Tommy's constant cringing if you want to finish the film.
In a nutshell, I thought the decisions the main character made were all short of idiotic, but then again, maybe it's attributed to his "condition". It didn't hamper the fact that the cinematography was quite good, the atmosphere--excellent, and the acting convincing. The spin of the story was also very interesting and I liked that they added an element of supernatural in it.
The pace of the movie is a bit slow, but I thought that worked quite well for the film. There's not much action involved, but I thought the ending was quite good. I still don't regret watching the film and would recommend it.
In a nutshell, I thought the decisions the main character made were all short of idiotic, but then again, maybe it's attributed to his "condition". It didn't hamper the fact that the cinematography was quite good, the atmosphere--excellent, and the acting convincing. The spin of the story was also very interesting and I liked that they added an element of supernatural in it.
The pace of the movie is a bit slow, but I thought that worked quite well for the film. There's not much action involved, but I thought the ending was quite good. I still don't regret watching the film and would recommend it.
Not as bad as the previous user has stated, and seeing that he is Irish, you would think he would have a bit more encouragement for Irish funded films. Granted it is certainly not perfect, but the scary scenes are genuinely scary and the film does provide a jump here and there. The lead performance was strong enough for an upcoming actor and I liked the idea of a weak main character. The bargained price Brian Cox priest character was a bit too much though and the scenes involving him really took from the film. Overall very watchable and with more of a budget this could have been a whole other film....which is probably a bad thing
I have a friend who's got a mild degree of agoraphobia and this movie, apart from being a decent horror flick, reminds me of him and kinda raises the question of people with that kind of disability.
The portrayal of a guy who goes over his fears & conditions to save his child from the hands of a pack of violent children is harsh and powerful and the director, IMHO, made it quite possible to identify with the main actor. The plot is smart, not easily predictable and the effects are okayish, given the budget.
A hidden gem worth watching.
The portrayal of a guy who goes over his fears & conditions to save his child from the hands of a pack of violent children is harsh and powerful and the director, IMHO, made it quite possible to identify with the main actor. The plot is smart, not easily predictable and the effects are okayish, given the budget.
A hidden gem worth watching.
Did you know
- TriviaCiarán Foy got the idea for the story from an incident where he was attacked by a gang of kids at age eighteen.
- GoofsWhen Tommy leaves his home near the start of the film to take the baby to the centre, by his front door there is a phone base with no phone, when he returns later there is a phone in the cradle.
- SoundtracksAfter the Ball
Written by Charles Harris (as Charles K. Harris)
Performed by Richard McCullough
Arrangement and recording by Matthew Nolan and Cameron Doyle
Courtesy of SPR Sound
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Thành Lũy
- Filming locations
- Glasgow, Glasgow City, Scotland, UK(main location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $13,377
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,715
- Nov 11, 2012
- Gross worldwide
- $141,886
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
- 1.85 : 1
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