31 Days of Hell: The Appearance (2018) - Reviewed

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Medieval horror dealing in witch-hunting with nefarious witchfinders or inquisitors dabbling in elements of the supernatural, psychological or purely political have enjoyed a resurgence of interest within the last few years.  Between the recently released Neil Marshall witchfinder exploitation horror flick The Reckoning to the far artier and grandiose The Green Knight, the setting and elements of magical realism, fantasy and/or leanings towards horror have come back into the forefront of modern cinema.  

Mixing historical period drama with the gothic horror tale through a contemporary lens, the medieval fantasy-horror film is no doubt back.  Judging from the successes of shows such as Game of Thrones as well as renewed interest in the cult return of Ken Russell’s seminal The Devils, that’s unlikely to change for some time.

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Which brings us to the microbudget medieval witchfinder/inquisition horror flick The Appearance, a film many have compared to Jean-Jacques Annaud’s The Name of the Rose for its kindred premise of an inquisitor investigating a series of serial murders possibly connected to the occult but in the end winds up being closer to Juan López Moctezuma’s Alucarda than anything.  

Written and directed by newcomer Kurt Knight, two years after his zombie horror debut We All Fall Down, the film stars Jake Stormeon as Mateho the Inquisitor who is called upon an abbey to investigate the imprisonment of a young woman named Isabel (Baylee Self) by local monks claiming she is a witch inflicting the town with the plague.
 
With his trusty sidekick Johnny (Game of Thrones stalwart Kristian Nairn), the two set out to provide the girl with a fair trial and investigation, much to the behest of the monks who demand immediate execution no questions asked.  Mateho, skeptical and of sound rationale, isn’t so quick to buy into the monks and townsfolk’s superstitions and sees an ordinary woman, like so many before her, being victimized by a corrupt system.  But when the strange paranormal occurrences and mysterious deaths begin to intensify anyway with many of the monks meeting grisly ends one by one, they start to redirect their sights on the arrival of their new unwanted, unwelcome inquisitor.

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Largely set within brick-and-mortar prison walls and iron bars with hooded cloaked figures lurking in the shadows with the halls lit by candlelight, the film plays almost like a blueprint for what Neil Marshall would do with The Reckoning and is mostly a sobering crime scene investigation piece.  But then it begins to shifts gears towards a survival/horror thriller with all literal Hell breaking loose within the enclosed cabal and prison walls, leaving even the film’s worldly down-to-Earth hero wondering just who or what is this young woman he’s been called upon to give a just and fair handshake with the law. 
 
An initially tense little medieval witch-hunting number which makes you trade about your alliances with the characters back and forth many times over throughout the movie, The Appearance isn’t the most frightening or best example of the genre but on its terms still manages to serve up an engaging slice of low budget period horror.  Visually speaking the film is handsomely lensed in 4K digital by We All Fall Down and Reed cinematographer Benjamin Allred, capturing the dark candlelit interiors walls of the prison beautifully and Snatchers composer Christopher Doucet serves up a moody and unsettling score for the film. 

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Reliant on less than stellar CGI effects at times, most of the film is carried by the two leads Jake Stormeon and Baylee Self, with Stormeon’s bearded just-and-fair inquisitor engaged in impassioned exchanges with Self’s imprisoned “witch”, trying to get to the bottom of how to prove her innocence despite the mounting death numbers.  Initially dialogue and set driven, eventually the film becomes something of a phantasmagorical fireworks-show though I don’t dare tell how that transpires.  For some, The Appearance will be a forgettable misfire but in the age of ongoing next to no-budget horror films medieval and contemporary in setting, it represents another welcome addition to the ever-growing popularity of period horror in the digital age.

--Andrew Kotwicki