The brand new horror film Faces of Dying begins from a problem so irresistible that it threatens to overshadow the outcomes: How do you reboot a horror franchise that’s half cult curiosity, half mockumentary, and half disturbingly convincing gore-effects demo reel? The 1978 Faces of Dying gained VHS notoriety as a horror tape past the pale, a compilation of “actual” individuals assembly numerous ghastly ends captured by the digital camera. You may probably discover it at no matter native video retailer had probably the most strong pornography part.
In actuality, solely a sliver of the footage in Faces of Dying was actual archival materials — principally the much less actively disturbing segments. However the grainy textures and visual-effects work have been life like sufficient to persuade loads of impressionable would-be edgelords and horror followers they have been watching a real snuff movie. The venture spawned three sequels and numerous compilations, making Faces of Dying a multi-film franchise with no story or characters. It’s additionally one that may now appear outmoded each technically and culturally, given the circulation of horrific web clips, viewers savviness about found-footage horror, and the fictional extremes of films like Hostel. The brand new fictional-narrative model of Faces of Dying finds a intelligent method right into a 2026 model — although it additionally finds a too-easy method out. It’s each a canny modern riff on the fabric and a well-made however solely reasonably scary slasher.
Director/co-writer Daniel Goldhaber and co-writer/producer Isa Mazzei are well-equipped to discover the eerie area the place on-line content material turns into one thing extra convincingly illicit than only a viral video. They beforehand made the superb internet-based psychological thriller Cam, a few camgirl who encounters an internet doppelganger; in addition to the much less on-line (however very reality-inspired) thriller Blow Up a Pipeline. The verisimilitude of the latter appears to be at work within the new film’s peek behind the content-moderation curtain. Margot (Barbie Ferreira) works at a TikTok-like video-hosting website, reviewing clips which have been flagged for numerous causes, however whereas she absorbs bland company rhetoric about doing proper by customers, she’s really subjected to punishing and unforgiving productiveness expectations. In service of clicking by means of as a lot as doable, she’s additionally anticipated to err on the facet of permissiveness, in order to not gum up the works with debates about appropriateness. It’s assembly-line moderation, and the miserable fluorescent-lit soul-draining environment of her workspace is without doubt one of the film’s scariest touches.
The job encourages Margot, who’s recovering from a traumatic expertise involving each grief and viral notoriety, to embrace dispassionate numbness and anonymity; the latter is definitely interesting to her. However after she critiques a number of movies with disturbingly realistic-looking violence and the identical menacing hashtag, Margot’s inside alarms begin going off, a lot to the annoyance of her boss (Jermaine Fowler). A take a look at the outdated Faces of Dying VHS confirms it: Somebody is recreating scenes from the film. However are they staged, or real murders? And whose duty is it to research them? Whereas the sharing of the movies is horrific, that power posting could possibly be the one clue to stopping a maniac who would possibly in any other case work quietly in personal. Ignoring the recommendation of her mates and coworkers, Margot takes issues into her personal fingers.
It’s an excellent set-up, taking part in on the sketchy historical past of the unique film: acknowledging its fakeness whereas taking part in on our fears of (or fascination with) the benefit of stumbling throughout horrific real-life footage on-line. The issue is that after Goldhaber and Mazzei have so clearly evoked that feeling, they don’t absolutely capitalize on it. Not like Cam, which turns into progressively extra mysterious and unnerving as its heroine digs deeper right into a thriller, Faces of Dying doesn’t go all that far down the rabbit gap. It does such a fantastic job creating an unabashedly fictional companion piece to the grainy flim-flam of the unique that it by accident demystifies itself. This doesn’t render it utterly toothless; the again half of the film does have some disturbing photos and concepts. (There’s one memorable little bit of gore involving mannequins, for instance.) It additionally roughly backs off any feeling of true extremity, and stays throughout the realm of a well-made slasher.
Within the yr of Scream 7, that’s not nothing. Goldhaber has a eager sense of pacing by means of enhancing, and crafts some sequences, like a chase by means of a grassy suburb, which are viscerally thrilling. The screenplay provides Ferreira each final-girl grit and a fried vulnerability that performs to her strengths as an actor. Although she’s an empathetic presence as all the time, Ferreira summons an open-wound emotional rawness that explains why some individuals discover it really easy to look away from her warnings. It’s the higher world round her that doesn’t fairly come to life. Regardless of a creepy efficiency from Dacre Montgomery as an elusive antagonist, Ferreira doesn’t have a lot to play off of; there’s not a lot element or thriller throughout the acquainted framework of a slashing-psycho film.
Some will evaluate the brand new Faces of Dying to the latest Purple Rooms, a very disturbing remedy of digital snuff, and that’s in all probability not honest. From the soar, Faces of Dying is clearly aiming for one thing extra playful than upsetting. Charli xcx has a small function as Margot’s disaffected but self-satisfied edgelord coworker, a strolling (and caricatured) cautionary story concerning the risks of ignoring your humanity (or others’) for kicks; that’s not the casting alternative of a film aiming for pure queasy dread. The pop star’s temporary efficiency additionally exemplifies a satirical angle that doesn’t really feel absolutely exploited. Scenes just like the stalking of an internet influencer present neither nasty dark-comedy catharsis nor genuinely unsettling shocks.
This shouldn’t diminish how a lot better-made Faces of Dying is than most slashers. As a horror film, it supplies the requisite enjoyable evening out with an additional modern kick that can make some viewers assume twice concerning the psychological and moral mechanics behind their every day scroll. It simply can’t compete with the checkered, transgressive repute of its namesake. Actually iterating on the unseemly thrills of Faces of Dying, daring because it sounds, might in the end be unattainable.
Faces of Dying is in theaters on April tenth.
