After their teenage son is killed in a car crash, Paul and Anne move to the New England countryside to start a new life. But the grieving couple are about to become the prey of a family of vengeful spirits that reside in their home. It soon becomes clear that the suspiciously peaceful town is hiding a terrifyingly dark secret. Now they must find a way to fight back against both the living and the dead as their new home threatens to send their souls – and the soul of their lost son – into hell.
The visual effects are great and the vengeful ghosts - burnt out with nowhere to go - are brilliantly realised on screen. There's plenty of gore and a sprinkling of tension along the way, and at just over 80 minutes We Are Still Here doesn't outstay its welcome - unlike the inhabitants of the film. However, the storyline fails to break the mould, it's a little slow out of the blocks and some of the lead performances are underwhelming.
Monte Markham (TV regular from Baywatch to Fringe) seems to be having a great time, hamming it up as the creepy neighbour, but Barbara Crampton (pretty much a horror movie icon) fails to set the screen on fire as long-suffering heroine, Anne. Andrew Sesenig, who plays Anne's husband, fares a little better but with the exception of Markham, none of the characters leave a lasting impression. The supporting cast members fare little better and brooding menace is squandered by a lack of empathy for the paper-thin characters.
Still, Ted Geoghegan shows great promise as a director of horror. If he can find a cast and storyline as creative as his cellar-dwelling bogeymen, sense of fun and gore-geous visual trickery, we might be on to something. A sequel anyone? Definitely worth a look.
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