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Comedown (2012)

 
Comedown 2012
Comedown 2012
Comedown 2012

 
Film Info
 

Director(s): Menhaj Huda
 
Writer(s): Steven Kendall
 
Starring: Jessica Barden, Geoff Bell, Adam Deacon
 
Genre: Horror
 
Synopsis: A street gang are tasked with setting up a pirate radio aerial on the top floor of an abandoned tower block but once they get there, they find a lot more than they bargained for.
 
UK DVD Release: 11 March 2013
 
Acting
 
 
 
 
 


 
Direction
 
 
 
 
 


 
Enjoyment
 
 
 
 
 


 
Soundtrack
 
 
 
 
 


 
Story
 
 
 
 
 


 
Total Score
 
 
 
 
 
3.5/ 5


User Rating
no ratings yet

 

Peaks


Creepy first half and shocking end.

Troughs


Atmosphere gives way to blood and gore.


The Quote

Comedown is a tower block set slasher from the director of Kidulthood. Is it a grimy British Halloween or more Friday 13th pt VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan?

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Posted March 11, 2013 by

 
Content
 
 

Our Film Review:

Comedown opens well and is fantastically atmospheric from the start. The tower block looms eerily in the background as the characters are established. The mash-up of genres is dealt with effectively and using a tower block gives the film a subtle social message that Menhaj Huda delivered so well in Kidulthood. Some great sound design comes into play here too, the use of everyday sounds, such as the noise of trains passing, are used to good effect and really enhance the horror elements early on.

Character-wise the film struggles, the gang are identikit characters to most British urban films and, as a result, don’t prove to be a particularly likeable bunch. This can go one of two of ways for a slasher film. It’s undoubtedly satisfying to watch unlikeable characters get killed off, but the audience needs a hero to empathise with. Whilst the lead character does appear to have some redeeming features, he has just been released from jail and is obviously still a part of gang culture. Rightly or wrongly this will be turn off to a lot of viewers. This isn’t the first film to suffer from this problem but Comedown at least deals with this better than Attack the Block (in which a mugger turns out to be a hero).

So what about the bad guy, a menacing figure who stalks the tower block in a hooded jacket? It’s nothing new but he proves effective enough here even if he is a lot more effective when kept in the shadows than brought out into the light. The tower block, coupled with a menacing hooded figure, delivers effective scares for the first half. Once we see the antagonist torturing his victims, the film strays a little too close to Saw territory for its own good, and blood and gore creep in at the expense of atmosphere. This is a real shame because the opening forty minutes are genuinely tense and, had the film kept this up, we could have been looking at a great little horror. It’s not all bad in the second half though, the ending is certainly not what the audience will be expecting, helping make up for some of the film’s shortcomings.

Overall Comedown is not too bad and is certainly an entertaining genre piece, the kills are suitably horrific and there is fun to be had. It’s just a little disappointing that the film squanders its early promise and just ends up being okay when there was potential here for something much better.

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Paul Anderson

 
I studied film at the University of Gloucestershire and whilst I have love for all things cinema related my passion is for horror. I am also a huge advocate of independent short film and review and promote such work on my own website. Follow my filmic rants @paulonnfilm