The Guardian (USA)

Honeydew review – flame-grilled rural horror

- Leslie Felperin

A first feature from director of short films Devereux Milburn, co-written by Milburn and the film’s cinematogr­apher-producer Dan Kennedy, this is a stylised, unsettling horror jaunt that plays interestin­g variations on an all-too-familiar plot premise. Sam and Riley, a good-looking couple in their 20s, played respective­ly by Sawyer Spielberg (yes, son of Steven Spielberg) and Malin Barr, takes the always foolish decision to leave the safety of the city for a camping trip. In this case, they elect to pitch their tent somewhere in rural New England because Riley is working on a doctoral thesis about a (fictitious) fungal infection in wheat that causes gangrene and madness in cows and people.

However, they soon get run off their

campsite by the local farmer (Stephen D’Ambrose), and a flat car battery forces them to seek help at the cluttered homestead of elderly Karen (Barbara Kingsley), a keen baker and cooker of meaty steaks, and her mute, brain-damaged son (Jamie Bradley). The city slickers soon find themselves at the mercy of ravenous desires; but on the plus side, all the TV sets seem to be perpetuall­y tuned to the last station in the world showing nothing but old black and white Popeye and Betty Boop cartoons from the Inkwell Studios’ heyday in the early 1930s, a glorious period in animation, and a good match for the body horror that’s about to be revealed here.

With a running time of 107 minutes, the film goes on just a little longer than it really needs to before it gets predictabl­y violent, grotesque and reasonably scary at last. But Milburn and Kennedy certainly know how to build a unique atmosphere, using liverish lighting schemes, cantered camera angles, unsettling split screens, misleading editing and above all a truly disturbing soundtrack that combines source noise with composer John Mehrmann’s musical score – a mix of synthesize­rs, unsettling percussive bongs and bubble pops, and what sounds like a theremin having a very bad day.

• Honeydew is released on 29 March on digital platforms.

 ??  ?? Disturbing … Honeydew
Disturbing … Honeydew

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