I Rewatched Skinamarink Alone In The Dark, And Here Are My Thoughts

Film

SPOILER WARNING: The following gives away many key scenes from Skinamarink, so if you have not seen it yet, proceed with caution.

The creepy and inventive plot of Skinamarink — two children trapped in their own  house with an omnipotent entity — had me so intrigued. I felt I had an obligation as a horror movie fan to see it during its limited theatrical run on the 2023 movies schedule in January. Much to my delight, I thought that writer and director Kyle Edward Ball’s bizarre feature-length debut was a thoroughly creepy, engrossingly unique indie horror game-changer. And months later, when I found a Steelbook copy of the film on Blu-ray, I bought it on the spot. However, I should admit that I did make that purchase with some hesitation.

Because while I still maintained the belief that Skinamarink was one of the best horror movies I had seen as of late, I also knew this was not an opinion shared by everyone. The highly experimental thriller’s divisive reception (on Rotten Tomatoes, 72% of critics like it, but it has a 44% audience rating) had awakened a new level of fear within. And it forced me to ponder how I might feel about it when I watched it a second time. I thought I would wait until the appropriately spooky month of October to go “in this house” a second time and the following is a breakdown of my reaction.

Phone from Skinamarink

(Image credit: Shudder)

My Anticipation Of Jump Scares Was Enhanced

Originally Posted Here

Articles You May Like

Noah Kahan announces new album Great Divide: The songs are the words I would say if I could
Heres Why Brian May Says Queen Wont Tour America
Nervosas New Album Slave Machine Announced, Title Track Streaming Now
The Top 5 Rolling Stones Concert-Opening Songs
Producer Says It Was Hell Working With the Rolling Stones — Heres Why