As Above, So Below
Dir: John Erick
Dowdle
Starring: Perdita
Weeks, Ben Feldman, and Edwin Hodge
93 Minutes
Claustrophobic and in moments creepy, director John Erick
Dowdle gives “As Above, So Below” a fighting chance amongst genre clichés and
forced frights. Using the rudimentary “found footage” style Dowdle transports a
cast of young explorers into the catacombs underneath the streets of Paris. The
unsettling location creates some wonderful atmosphere. Unfortunately the
narrative foregoes exploration of some provoking historical elements introduced
early on and the film becomes overly predictable and filled with the usual
telegraphed scares that flaw films using this style choice.
Scarlett (Perdita Weeks) is a single-minded researcher bent
on finishing her deceased father’s life work of finding an ancient historical
artifact. This leads her initially into a dangerous cavern in Iran that almost
kills her. Following the clues from Iran she is lead to Paris and into the
forbidden section of the catacombs below the city. Looking for a secret
doorway, Scarlett and her crew are trapped in the mazelike tomb leading them
into the supernatural and face to face with their innermost fear.
The story begins as a treasure hunt in the vein of “Tomb
Raider”, though not as intelligent or action packed. The history mystery has
Scarlett investigating artifacts and piecing together a puzzle started by her
father. This ultimately serves to accommodate the plot change, which brings a larger
group of people to aid Scarlett into the catacombs of Paris. Once below the
group is haunted by apparitions that reflect their own traumas and fears. The
film only touches the surface of character development, though it could have
offered an interesting inquiry into the secrets of past civilizations and the
personal horror hidden inside the individual. The introduction is fairly sloppy
though when the transition from adventure to horror happens, the atmosphere
takes control and things get interesting. While nothing narratively will be particularly
unique for horror fans, Dowdle shrewdly utilizes claustrophobic spaces, the
confusion of darkness, and disorienting sound designs to keep things sinister.
In one scene the simple design of a chanting chorus, along with a nightmarish
situation for one of the characters, really brings the journey into the
cavernous unknown to echoing life.
It’s unfortunate that the film uses the “found footage”
technique. Whether a budgetary or production concern the hand-held approach
hurts the frightening potential that the disturbing environment possesses. Every
scare becomes telegraphed and the camera shakes away the atmosphere.
“As Above, So Below” has an effectively creepy mood to work
with, and for a moment the location hides the weaknesses of the narrative. Perdita
Weeks gives a decent performance as the brave and ambitious to a fault
researcher but unfortunately the tiresome shaky filmic technique hinders the
terrifying experience proposed in the premise.
Monte’s Rating
3.00 out of 5.00
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