Now for a review of Toad Road, a little known found footage horror feature.
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"Man, I hope I get to pee on a tree today. That would be SO rad." |
Thus began the independently financed and
released mumblegore horror package Toad
Road, a film whose staying power is mostly derived from knowledge of the
very real abuses that went into it.
Taken at face value, it’s mildly unsettling and moody with some
docudrama cinematography and ethereal ambient music by Sigur Ros. Upon reading into just how much of what
unfolds was unsimulated with a very real drug induced death of its main
actress, Sara Anne Jones, the film becomes a disturbing meditation on the Seven
Gates of Hell as a metaphor for the depths of drug addiction.
From the onset, Toad Road lies somewhere between Jackass and the aimless meandering characters in Harmony Korine’s Gummo.
Episodic, fragmented and a bit hazy in focus, the film follows a group
of slackers who spend their daily lives getting high on drugs and alcohol. The worst of the bunch is James (James
Davidson playing himself), a scruffy long haired hippie who saunters from one
foggy fix to the next, either resulting in vomiting on himself or passing out
too drunk to stop his giggling cronies from lighting his pubic and rectal hair
on fire (yes, it’s shown). Upon his
meanderings, he meets Sara (Sara Anne Jones), a goody two-shoes college student
intrigued by the possibilities of drug abuse who becomes obsessed with finding
the Seven Gates of Hell. While this sounds like a conventional horror plot, Toad Road is really a formless byproduct
of improvisation, documentary filmmaking and abstract editing. Made with virtually no production values to
speak of and a cast of nonprofessional actors basically being themselves, Toad Road can induce restlessness in
some viewers for the first 75% of the picture.
Clearly steeped in unbridled reality with a real fist fight caught on
camera and many scenes that would have been right at home on Intervention, it’s difficult to know
where the film is going or why we should care. But as it progresses and the Toad Road urban legend plays itself out,
it’s startlingly unnerving.
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"Damn it! Dentist screwed up again!" |
Score
-Andrew Kotwicki
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