Your Company
 

The Hallow

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom, United States, Ireland · 2015
1h 37m
Director Corin Hardy
Starring Joseph Mawle, Bojana Novaković, Michael McElhatton, Michael Smiley
Genre Fantasy, Horror

A family who moved into a remote mill house in Ireland with an infant son find themselves in a fight for survival against banshees, baby snatchers, and other demonic creatures living in the woods. This film cleverly twists and deforms the genres of fairy tales and children’s fables into a nightmare horror.

Stream The Hallow

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

60

Time Out London by Cath Clarke

Rather than letting the CGI do all the graft, Hardy unleashes a beautifully handcrafted army of puppets and animatronic demonic creatures. Too many, too soon, really. It’s overkill and pretty quickly you’re suffering from fiend fatigue.

70

Screen International by Charles Gant

Corin Hardy makes a slick, confident debut with supernatural horror The Hallow. Demonstrating a facility with storytelling almost as skilful as his nimble orchestration of animatronics and visual effects.

63

Slant Magazine by Christopher Gray

The film never really digs into its suggested themes of gentrification, domestic turmoil, or backwoods folklore, but most of its effectiveness stems from a kitchen-sink approach to genre clichés.

70

Variety by Geoff Berkshire

The directorial debut of visual artist Corin Hardy is never less than arresting to the eye, but thin characters and a familiar story hold this Irish chiller back from entering the top tier of recent horror entries.

60

CineVue by Jamie Neish

What starts out as creepy descends into a creature feature that's more laughable than scary.

60

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Mr. Hardy, however, would rather busy himself with reminders of earlier creature features.... Luckily, John Nolan’s old-school effects are wicked good, and Martijn van Broekhuizen’s mossy photography is pleasingly sinister.

70

Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray

This backwoods monster movie boasts compelling performances, eye-catching creatures and an effective blend of practical and digital effects.

80

Village Voice by Pete Vonder Haar

The Hallow offers plenty of scares and is unnerving from wire to wire, wrapping up the second act with a bang and red-lining the tension until the end.

63

RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams

The Hallow also de-emphasizes human drama to the point where it often feels like a Jenga tower of set pieces, a disappointing fact that's most apparent during the film's first 40 minutes.

Users who liked this film also liked