“People don’t come to places like this to live, they come here to die.”
Horror films are a tough genre to do right, whether you’ve got vampires traveling oceans of time, zombies taking over the earth, or have a werewolf that terrorizes an isolated retirement community. Thankfully for horror fans, ‘Late Phases’ goes a long way towards getting so much right that it makes you forget any small grievances. For an independent horror movie, this is a breath of fresh air in a stifled genre.
Ambrose, a fantastic Nick Damici, is a surly blind Viet Nam veteran who is being taken to his new home by his exasperated son Will, played by Ethan Embry. Will can’t seem to drop off his father fast enough and Ambrose seemingly can’t get rid of his son soon enough. Ambrose is a man who in his mind is getting dropped off to die - little does he know that’s more accurate than he’s aware. Ambrose’s first night in his new duplex home is disrupted by the brutal murder of his next door neighbor and the vicious attack on his service dog.
Still a soldier at heart, Ambrose is a man of action, only at first he doesn’t know where to direct his attention. After the death of his dog, he learns that these attacks are fairly common, in fact they happen every month on the full moon. Without the ability to see the world, all he can do is rely on his hearing and his acute sense of smell. The creature that attacked his neighbor and killed his dog, had a particular smell, one that when he finds it again he’ll have solved the mystery. Since these attacks happen with the full moon, he’s given an entire month to prepare his home, retrain his body for war, and find the killer before he, she, or it strikes again.
When the horror genre is treated with respect, it is a great day for genre fans. With ‘Late Phases,’ fans get a solid werewolf movie that is easily the best of its kind to come around in a great long while. For every ‘The Howling’ or ‘American Werewolf in London,’ there is a ‘Skin Walkers’ or ‘American Werewolf in Paris’ to push the subgenera back a step or two. In this case, ‘Late Phases’ does the best thing you can do with any horror film and that is to take its time. If helps to know a character before bad things start happening. ‘Late Phases’ also goes the opposite direction of many horror films in that it shows it’s monster very quickly albeit in fleeting quick glimpses. It’s there. We know it’s werewolves, our main character has figured it out, there’s just no need for us to be blind of this fact… so to speak. But because we know the stakes, it adds to the growing tension as the days tick by to the next full moon.
Lending itself to this film is a wonderfully assembled cast, in particular lead Nick Damici. He brings an almost Clint Eastwood meets Charles Bronson level to his performance. Ethan Embry is also a welcome sight, especially in this role as the removed son. Their father son relationship could have easily slipped into cliche to be a joke, but it never goes over the top and remains believable. Then you have two more great additions to the cast in the form of Tom Noonan as the empathetic Father Rodger and Lance Guest as Griffin - both play their parts as men who know more than what they’re letting on, but never tip their hats, nicely prolonging the mystery element to this film. For genre fans, Tina Louise of ’The Stepford Wives,’ Rutanya Alda of ‘When a Stranger Calls,’ Caitlin O’Heaney of ‘Wolfen,’ Larry Fessenden, ‘Session 9,’ Dana Ashbrook, ‘Twin Peaks,’ and Karen Lynn Gorney of ’Saturday Night Fever’ are all given fun little roles that work beyond simple cameos and actually forward the plot in their own way.
On top of the performances viewers can expect some outstanding creature and makeup effects. Little if any digital effects were used, and while the appearance of the monsters can skew a tad goofy in places, the transformation scene is a wonderful ode to practical effects and is a refreshing sight to see. Lots of gore to be appreciated in the final act to say the least! Then you have the assured direction of Adri?n Garc?a Bogliano and the talented storytelling sense by Eric Stolze. As I said before, horror is a genre that is very easy to do wrong, but these guys killed it, bringing a movie that while a tad predictable is still a fun and thrilling ride. As a score hound, I was easily lost in composer Wojciech Golczewski’s (Munger Road) music - and I’m more than a tad irritated that it hasn’t been released on digital or disc - and unless something changes, it probably never will be.
Is this a perfect horror film? No, not perfect, but still really, really good. There are some little plot contrivances, like Ambrose seemingly being the first person to put the evidence together about what is terrorizing his retirement community, but if you focus on the little things like that, you’re going to miss the greater and more important whole that this was a good movie. I am a horror movie nut, so discovering this one, not knowing really anything about it other than that it existed is a real treat. Easily recommended.