Tag: Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson

  • ‘Resolution’ is a meta-horror sci-fi worth your time | movie review

    ‘Resolution’ is a meta-horror sci-fi worth your time | movie review

    Resolution follows a man’s attempt to force his friend into sobriety and while his attempt is good intentioned something sinister is happening at the same time

    Resolution is a creepy, atmospheric, and wholly satisfying meta-horror that served as a perfect introduction to Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson’s specific brand of high concept, lo-fi science fiction.

    ▶︎ Streaming on Prime Video. Available to buy or rent on Apple TV, Amazon, and YouTube.

    Indie filmmakers Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson have a singular ability to take a high concept science fiction story and bring it to life with an endearing lo-fi charm. And though I’ve loved their creature feature romance Spring and time travel mystery The Endless, I’ve actually never seen their debut feature.

    Resolution, which had its world premiere at the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival, is the only one of the duo’s films that could be firmly planted in the horror genre, though like all their work, it is a work of genre-bending. 


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    Resolution follows Michael (Peter Cilella), a graphic designer who is lured from the city to a remote rural area on the edge of an Indian reservation where his high school best friend Chris (Vinny Curran), a drug addict on a full bender, has holed up in a seemingly abandoned shack. Determined to help him, Michael plans to restrain Chris for a week and force him to sober up—granted he did give Chris the option of just going to rehab.

    However, things start to take a turn for the creepy when Michael realizes that the video and map that he was sent to help him track down Chris weren’t sent from Chris at all—and the videos keep coming portraying insidious and sinister “stories” that make Michael think they’re a part of something’s deranged game.


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    The mystery unfolds at a slow but steady pace as a dread-filled atmosphere drives the suspense. However, like all of Moorhead and Benson’s films, Resolution isn’t quick to answer any of your questions—and it’s better because of it.

    Underneath it all, there is a surprisingly engrossing story of the relationship between the two men—one seen as a “fuck up” and the other as having it all. Still, what makes the film great is its meta-commentary on the genre itself. And though it’s never as subversive or goes as full tilt into satire as its genre companion The Cabin in the Woods, Resolution is a wholly satisfying—and uber-unnerving exercise in sci-fi horror.


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    Hey! I’m Karl. You can find me on Twitter and Letterboxd. I’m also a Tomatometer-approved critic.

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  • ‘Synchronic’ is what I love about science fiction | movie review

    ‘Synchronic’ is what I love about science fiction | movie review

    After discovering a drug sends you back in time, a paramedic uses it to help his best friend find his daughter in Synchronic

    Synchronic has a fun enough concept to keep you hooked, but Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson—along with a stellar performance by Anthony Mackie—add in their effortlessly charming direction to make it the exact kind of science fiction romp that I crave even if it doesn’t quite stick the landing.

    Aaron Moorhead and Justin Benson are perhaps one of the most underrated indie filmmaking duos working today. Their specific brand of high-concept but endearingly down-to-earth science fiction storytelling has brought us great films like The Endless, Resolution and Spring. However, so much of what makes them successful is their low-fi approach to sci-fi. Partially from choice, but mostly because of their budgetary constraints. It forces them to be more clever with their directorial choices and storytelling.

    However, with Synchronic, their biggest step forward into the mainstream, they have the resources to go all the way with their concept of a drug that makes its user travel through time—complete with high production values and two A-list stars above the title. And in some ways, it removes the charm that has made them so successful up to this point. However, in others, it removes the restrictions that would have prevented them from going full tilt otherwise. The results are decisively mixed.


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    The first thirty minutes of the film, though, represent the best of the duo. We’re immediately dropped into a mystery where two paramedics, Steve (Anthony Mackie) and Dennis (Jamie Dornan), begin to encounter increasingly odd calls. In one, a man was impaled by a sword that looks to be from the 1600s. In another, a woman was bitten by a snake that hasn’t been seen in the area for a decades—maybe more. The only thing they have in common is in both cases the victims were high on a drug called “Synchronic.”

    The story, moving swiftly between scenes showing the drug’s unique effects—the duo also edited the film, quickly sets up that Steve and Dennis have been friends for since high school and know more about each other than anyone else. They’re so close, in fact, that when Steve finds out he has a brain tumor that will likely kill him with in months, his first reaction is to figure out how to tell his family—in this case, Dennis.

    Synchronic movie
    Jamie Dornan and Anthony Mackie in Synchronic. Courtesy of Well Go USA Entertainment.

    Though gorgeously atmospheric through Moorhead’s moody cinematography and Jimmy LaValle’s synth-heavy score, almost verging on horror, Synchronic maintains an immensely watchable tone. Moorhead and Benson’s signature dark humor is embedded just beneath the surface and Mackie handles it with ease. His emotional turmoil from his diagnosis coupled with his newfound interest in the source of “synchronic” is a masterclass in showing instead telling.

    The duo’s entanglement with the drug gets even more complicated when Dennis’ teenage daughter Brianna (Ally Ioannides) goes missing after taking “synchronic.” With nothing to lose, Steve buys all the remaining supplies of the drug and learns from the creator that it shifts time for the user, but only with specific parameters. The rest of the movie is structured as a series of experiments where Steve attempts to understand how it works in the hopes that he can use it to save Brianna from whatever time she has become stuck in.


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    Steve’s exploits with “synchronic,” that are presented as a series of taped experiments, are exactly what I love about science fiction. What Moorhead and Benson excel at is taking a concept—one that we may have thought of ourselves—and exploring it, not as a high-concept, but instead as a simple romp based on “what-ifs.” And the world that they build in Synchronic is ripe for multiple fun excursions.

    Unfortunately, the movie never takes it as far as you want it. It comes close. Steve’s brush with the indigenous people of the New Orleans swamps or the early 20th century when people probably weren’t as keen on a Black man appearing out of nowhere in their yard are interesting applications of the possibilities. But when the story looks to wrap up, it retracts and becomes small again. I almost wish 30 minutes was added on to the running time just so we could watch Steve play in the possibilities.

    The final act is really where Synchronic falters. It hits the correct beats, but doesn’t add enough tension or suspense—something that Moorehead and Benson excel at in the first third. However, their careful character mapping and emotional arcs payoff—again thanks to Mackie’s awards-worthy performance. Even so, Synchronic is the exact kind of science fiction I love—eerie, entertaining, complex but full of humanity.


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    Hey! I’m Karl. You can find me on Twitter and Letterboxd. I’m also a Tomatometer-approved critic.

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