This is another fine release from High Fliers Films, a company I only discovered recently with the release of ‘The Cleansing (2019)’. I am delighted to find there are many films under their banner, and a lot of them are horror stories.
This is another modestly budgeted chiller, based on the real life Bender family of the 1870s, the first known serial killer family. Director and co-writer John Alexander orchestrates events in a restrained manner, never in a hurry to tell their story. If you are prepared for a mainly unspectacular, intelligent slow-burner, this will not disappoint. That isn’t to say there aren’t moments that won’t make you jump – the fate of one of the local doctor’s patients, and the doctor’s own eventual fate, for example, are handled deftly. Shocking moments in an overall ambience of distinctly calmed oddness.
There’s an unspecific but unsettling nature about the directorial choices here too – lingering just too long on a smile, highlighting the rugged features of a character contrasted against a wide blue sky, introducing the grocery store as a lone silhouette, the omnipresent but barely perceptible buzzing of flies – that further communicates the sense of dislocation and unease as further disappearances occur in Fairweather.
Just don’t eat the pork.