Housebound

Housebound
Directed by Gerard Johnstone
Produced by Luke Sharpe
Written by Gerard Johnstone
Starring
Music by Mahuia Bridgman-Cooper
Cinematography Simon Riera
Edited by Gerard Johnstone
Production
company
Semi-Professional Pictures
Release dates
  • March 10, 2014 (SXSW)
Running time
106 minutes
Country New Zealand
Language English

Housebound is a 2014 New Zealand horror comedy film written, edited, and directed by Gerard Johnstone. It is his feature film directorial debut.[1] The film had its world premiere on March 10, 2014, at South by Southwest and stars Morgana O'Reilly as a woman sentenced to house arrest in a potentially haunted house.[2]

Plot

Kylie, a troubled young woman, attempts to steal the safe from an ATM. Her accomplice knocks himself out while attacking the ATM with a sledgehammer, and, when she is slowed by attempting to save him, the Police capture both. Due to her history of recidivism, she is sentenced by the judge (Ian Mune) to house arrest for eight months under the care of her mother, Miriam. Kylie does not get along with either her mother or her step-father, Graeme, both of whom she considers to be nothing but boring annoyances. A security contractor, Amos, explains that Kylie's ankle monitor will alert the police if she ever leaves her mother's house's premises.

Kylie is further frustrated by her mother's behavior when Miriam calls into a radio talk show and says that her house is haunted. After a disembodied hand grabs her ankle in the basement, Kylie becomes convinced that an intruder is in the house. Amos, responding to an alert from her ankle monitor after it reports tampering, takes Miriam's suggestion of a haunting seriously, much to Kylie's annoyance. Amos promises to return with ghost hunting equipment and perform a thorough examination of the house for free. When Kylie expresses continued skepticism, Amos chides her for having a closed mind.

After a series of unexplained experiences, including repeatedly finding the same toy in several rooms, Kylie comes to believe that there may be a ghost in the house. Dennis, a social worker assigned to Kylie, becomes concerned with what he believes to be possible delusions both Miriam and Kylie. After reviewing footage from security cameras, Amos does not believe her reports and accuses her of lying. However, once Graeme reveals to Kylie that their home was one once a halfway house and the site of a horrific murder, Amos once again becomes interested. As they investigate further, they discover evidence of the crime, including an orthodontic retainer. During a visit, a blackout occurs, and Dennis is attacked by an unknown assailant. The Police are skeptical of Miriam's insistence that a ghost is responsible, but they do not push any further.

When Kylie and Amos discover that her neighbor uses a retainer, Kylie breaks into the man's house and wakes him as she attempts to take his retainer. After she flees into the man's basement, Kylie panics when she believes the neighbor to be stalking her, and she accidentally stabs Graeme, who has also entered the neighbor's house. As Graeme recuperates in the hospital, Amos in turn attempts to break into her neighbor's house. The neighbor says that he is not the killer, and he tells the story of a young savant, Eugene, whom he adopted. Eugene is an expert at mechanics and electronics, and he disappeared a year previous to the killing, though the neighbor believes him to be possibly responsible.

At the same time, Kylie accidentally discovers Eugene's secret hallways in their house, and she flees. Kylie and Amos separately converge at the police station, and Amos corroborates her wild stories of a serial killer who lives in hidden passageways. However, the police find no evidence, and Dennis convinces all involved that it would be best if Kylie were institutionalized. Once Dennis reveals that he wears a retainer, Kylie becomes suspicious of him. When she confronts him with evidence that he was an intern at the halfway house, he turns hostile and attempts to kill Miriam and Kylie. When Amos arrives at the house, Dennis incapacitates him. Kylie and Miriam flee into the secret tunnels, where the encounter Eugene.

Realizing that their paranormal activity has been Eugene all this time, they are at first frightened but realize that he is friendly. Dennis stabs Eugene, and, after an extended hunt that results in his apparent death, knocks out Kylie, and begins to strangle Miriam. Eugene wakes Kylie and hands her a weapon, which she uses to stab Dennis. As Dennis sees that the weapon is connected to a long cable, Eugene throws a switch, and high voltage explodes Dennis' head. Months later, all have recovered, Amos finally removes Kylie's ankle monitor, and Eugene has seemingly become an accepted (albeit mostly unseen) member of the household.

Cast

Production

Johnstone was first inspired to create a horror film after watching Ghosthunters on television and received additional inspiration from classic films such as The Changeling and The Legend of Hell House.[3] While writing the script Johnstone wanted the character of Kylie to be "someone that wouldn't scare easily. That way, when she does finally fall victim to fear, it's much more palpable."[3] He experienced some difficulty in achieving the film's exterior shots of the house, as budgetary issues limited their options of homes and renovations to the exterior of their chosen house during the course of filming also raised some issues.[3]

Release

Housebound had its world premiere at the South by Southwest film festival on March 11, 2014.[4]

Reception

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 96% of 23 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 7.7/10. The site's consensus reads: " Alternately hilarious, gross, and simply diverting, Housebound is the rare horror-comedy that delivers on both fronts."[5] Metacritic rated it 76/100 based on 10 reviews.[6] Hitfix gave it an A and wrote "sometimes at the festival you walk into a room knowing nothing, sit down, and get your skull punched in by a movie that is calibrated perfectly, that knows exactly what it wants to do, and that seems almost unnaturally confident considering it was made by a first-time feature director".[7] Fangoria praised the film, rating it at 3 out of 4 stars and stating that it "neatly carries some universal ideas about throwing away childish indignation and rebellion, and getting to know your parents as people with pasts and personal lives, not just nagging overseers."[8] Shock Till You Drop also gave Housebound a positive rating, as they considered it one of the highlights of South by Southwest.[9] Movies.com said it was a breath of fresh air for the often stale haunted-house genre.[10] Badass Digest told readers they had "a new favorite horror film of 2014".[11] Chuck Bowen of Slant Magazine rated it 2.5/4 stars and wrote that each of the film's elements are "competently and engagingly orchestrated" but do not combine into a coherent whole.[12]

Awards

In April 2014, Housebound won the audience award at the Dead by Dawn festival in Edinburgh. It also won the H. R. Giger Award « Narcisse » for Best Feature Film at the Neuchâtel International Fantastic Film Festival in July 2014.[13] In September 2014, the film won the Audience Award for the best international fantastic film at the Strasbourg European Fantastic Film Festival.[14] The film was 2015 nominated in three Fangoria Chainsaw Awards, for Best Limited Release Film, the Best Supporting Actress (Rima Te Wiata) and Best Screenplay.[15] Rima Te Wiata won the Fangoria Chainsaw Award for Best Leading Actress.[16]

Remake

In February 2015, New Line Cinema announced the production of the US remake.[17] Original writer and director Gerard Johnstone is set with Dave Neustadter and Walter Hamada as executive producer for New Line.[18]

References

  1. "Dominic Corry: Gerard Johnstone on Housebound". NZ Herald. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  2. "Dark New Zealand Comedy HOUSEBOUND Visits The Loo In First Clip". Twitch Film. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Whittaker, Richard. "SXSW Gets 'Housebound". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  4. "Schedule: Housebound". South by Southwest. Retrieved November 16, 2014.
  5. "Housebound (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  6. "Housebound". Metacritic. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  7. McWeeny, Drew (15 March 2014). "Smart and funny, someone needs to snap this up". Hitfix. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  8. Zimmerman, Samuel. ""HOUSEBOUND" (SXSW Movie Review)". Fangoria. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  9. Turek, Ryan. "SXSW Review: Housebound is the Real Discovery of the Fest". STYD. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  10. Hall, Peter (11 March 2014). "'Housebound' Mixes a Haunted-House Formula with Slasher Mystery to Create a Pretty Great Horror Movie". Movies.com. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  11. Gholson, John (14 March 2014). "SXSW Review: Creepy Crowd-Pleaser HOUSEBOUND Makes A Big Impression". BadassDigest.com. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  12. Bowen, Chuck (12 October 2014). "Housebound". Slant Magazine. Retrieved 17 March 2015.
  13. http://www.nifff.ch/?a=175,3406
  14. "Strasbourg European Fantastic Film Fest: 2014 Winners".
  15. "Chainsaw Awards Exclusive: “HOUSEBOUND” ‘For Your Consideration’ Posters!".
  16. "Exclusive: “HOUSEBOUND” Director Gerard Johnstone on Why Rima Te Wiata Deserves The Best Supporting Actress Chainsaw".
  17. "‘Housebound’ Getting Remade By New Line".
  18. "Housebound Being Remade".

External links