The Chapel

****

Reviewed by: Andrew Robertson

The Chapel
"This is a subtly scary film, menacing."

Opening with a shot of a cairn on anonymous hills and scored with weird electronic music, this is a discomfiting piece. There is a man, and a woman, strangers who were sharing a car. Their relationship joins the car in breaking down, abandoned as they search for help.

It doesn't come. Instead they happen across an abandoned church, make themselves tea, are startled by noises, get "the fear". It's palpable, oppressing. This is a subtly scary film, menacing. The colours and score, the environment are reminiscent of the work of Terry Nation - whatever is happening outside, this is human horror.

Copy picture

As the strangers, Alix Dunmore and James Cartwright are good. While we never know how they came to be here, how they know (or do not know) each other, they convince as individuals brought together by unseen circumstances.

The titular chapel is a haunting place. Noises in the woods aside, the never clarified nature of its abandonment just adds to the mystery. The music is important, composed by Ross Power, featuring a distinctive sounding Middle Eastern instrument, the oud. It's not quite atonal, but it is unsettling, and the film makes excellent use of it.

The Chapel succeeds as the best shorts do not only in entertaining as a thing of itself, but serving as a showcase for the talents involved. Written, edited, and directed by Ben Winter, it shows his abilities well. There's a temptation to know more about The Chapel, about those involved, but the quality of their mystery really asks only one thing - what he will do next?

Reviewed on: 22 Jun 2009
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Having found what appears to be a safe refuge in an old church, two strangers struggle to maintain an already fractured relationship.
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Director: Ben Winter

Writer: Ben Winter

Starring: Alix Dunmore, James Cartwright

Year: 2009

Runtime: 12 minutes

Country: UK

Festivals:

EIFF 2009

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