Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
    HORROR SCREAMS VIDEO VAULT – SUPPORTING INDEPENDENT HORROR
    • Home
    • Film Reviews
      • Films Beginning With Numbers or Symbols
      • A – C
      • D – F
      • G – I
      • J – L
      • M – O
      • P – R
      • S – U
      • V – X
      • Y – Z
    • Book Reviews
    • Franchise Corner
    • Competitions
    • Horror Screams Podcast
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube
    HORROR SCREAMS VIDEO VAULT – SUPPORTING INDEPENDENT HORROR

    Film Review: CRAWL (2019)

    Peter 'Witchfinder' HopkinsBy Peter 'Witchfinder' Hopkins12th February 202019 Comments2 Mins Read

    CRAWL **** USA 2019 Dir: Alexandre Aja. 87 mins

    A straight-forward, in-and-out-in-less-than-90-minutes revolt-of-nature survivalist horror flick from the filmmaker who kick-started the French splatter renaissance of the early 21st century. Eerily foreshadowing the real-life Category 5 Hurricane Dorian that threatened the Florida coast a couple of weeks after its UK cinema release, CRAWL is proficient contemporary B movie filmmaking following in the tradition of recent high concept creature features like BURNING BRIGHT (tiger in a house during a hurricane!), BAIT (sharks in a supermarket!) and THE SHALLOWS (one girl, one rock, one shark!).

    It’s stripped down to two central characters -everybody else is walking chum- and one main (flooded) interior set and, in a year when several Hollywood horror films were pushing the three-hour mark, it knows when to quit. Kaya Scodelario impresses as a gifted college-age swimmer who visits her dad (Barry Pepper) just as Hurricane Wendy batters the South Florida coast. He’s unconscious and injured in the crawlspace and soon both are at the mercy of a pair of alligators that have invaded via the storm drains while the house fills up with water. Flab-free and consistently suspenseful, CRAWL dispenses with exposition, keeps its family backstory concise and gives us an impressive, atypical heroine who’s worth rooting for. The ‘gators are brought to life courtesy of a first-class combination of physical FX and CGI, while Aja occasionally indulges his fondness for gruesome physical mutilation.

    Review by Steven West

     

    FacebookLikeShareTweetPin
    Alexandre Aja Crawl

    Related Posts

    ‘High Tension’ Limited Edition 4K/Blu-ray Dual Edition Box set – releasing 22nd January 2024

    22nd January 202403 Mins Read
    Read More

    Film Review: P2 (2007)

    18th December 201902 Mins Read
    Read More

    19 Comments

    1. Katie B on 13th February 2020 3:49 PM

      Pirahna 3D

      Reply
    2. Susan Smith on 13th February 2020 12:24 AM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    3. Mark Matthews on 12th February 2020 9:06 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    4. Craig Henry on 12th February 2020 8:27 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    5. Margaret Gallagher on 12th February 2020 7:30 PM

      Pirahna 3D

      Reply
    6. ValB on 12th February 2020 7:19 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    7. Helen Sherpa on 12th February 2020 7:17 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    8. Gurpreet Bhatia on 12th February 2020 5:30 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    9. LESLEY BRADLEY on 12th February 2020 3:47 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    10. Rob Griffiths on 12th February 2020 3:21 PM

      Piranha 3D

      Reply
    Newer Comments →

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Recent Posts
    • “A HARD PLACE” HITS APPLE TV & AMAZON PRIME VIDEO MAY 27TH — FELISSA ROSE STARS IN A BLOODSOAKED MONSTER THRILLER THAT DOESN’T HOLD BACK
    • FOUND TV Announces FOUND Original with Alternate Ending Only on DVD/Blu-ray
    • Without A Name – Available Now on Amazon
    • Return of the Living Dead, Trash’s Revenge filming June 27th with Thom Mathews and Beverly Randolph
    • American Poltergeist: The Curse of Lilith Ratchet is now available on Tubi
    Archives
    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.