In April 2020,Romance Archives British writer-director Rob Savage pranked his friends via Zoom with a terrifyingly clever live jump scare and captured their reactions on Twitter. Three months later, Savage released Host, an (almost) full length movie on the streaming platform Shudder, which expands his prank into one of 2020’s best examples of transmuting the spooky realities of technology, coronavirus, and that one dumb friend into timely, escapist entertainment.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Noting that Hostis “almost” full length is not to designate it as a short, but to acknowledge how much story gets packed into a run time of under an hour. The movie uses every single minute to set up its characters, foreshadowing, and twists while still leaving time for screamingly violent horror goodness. Savage is no stranger to tight scripting, having drawn critical acclaim for his previous horror shorts Dawn of the Deaf(2016) and Salt(2017), but Hoststands out as remarkable for getting a full film’s worth of plot within the external time constraint of a non-subscription Zoom call.
SEE ALSO: 10 of the best podcasts for horror fansHost’s premise revolves around a group of friends meeting up on Zoom to stay in touch while social distancing during the coronavirus pandemic. One of the friends, the uptight but justified Hayley (Haley Bishop), sets up the meeting as an “online seance,” calling in a medium to provide some low-key thrills for her friends. The seance goes about as well as any seance goes in a horror movie, though Hostis far from typical in its brilliance and unique execution.
Host is far from typical in its brilliance and unique execution.
Though Hosttakes place on a computer screen, it feels different from previous attempts at laptop horror because its principal photography actually took place using the devices used by the characters. In an interview with SF Chronicle, director Rob Savage explained that he got Zoom’s permission to use their software in the film, taught the actors how to set up spooky effects with fishing wire, and directed their performances over video chat. His authentic approach seeps into Host’s final product, making its quality all the more impressive.
Also notable are the quality of the performances from Host’s actors, some of whom are the same people Savage pranked in his original Twitter video. Their natural delivery and typical social-distance happy hour banter in the film’s earlier moments lull the audience into a sense of familiarity, which makes the growing terror of the malignant spirit haunting their characters even scarier. Watching Hoston a laptop or tablet adds to this feeling, especially framed by Zoom’s actual interface and amplified by the service’s occasional dips in video and audio quality.
There is an obvious if simple metaphor in Host, one that rises considering that the characters are only on Zoom because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Without spoiling too much (and most of this is in Shudder’s own description of the movie), the Zoom seance only goes wrong because one character doesn’t take the situation seriously.
That character, like those who insist their peers are overreacting to the current pandemic and behave in accordance to that belief, is responsible for carnage that affects the vigilant, the frightened, the complicit, and the innocent. No one is safe when one person mistakes a threat for a joke — regardless if the threat is viral or paranormal.
Host is now streaming on Shudder.
Rey's parentage will be revealed in 'The Last Jedi' — but will it matter?'League of Legends' developer loses lawsuit for using soccer player's likenessThe fight between Uber and the Philippines is onGlitches and exploits hilariously ruined a recent 'For Honor' tournamentGoogle is letting you use its Contacts app on any Android phone nowGmail's iPhone app now warns you about phishing scamsPumpkin Pie M&M's are here and summer is now over thanks to brandsLook closely at this MacBook Air that was made entirely out of Lego bricksClassy football fan brings his own cheese plate to the gameA new startup could revolutionize how young women think about their fertilityFacebook is testing a secret photo sharing app in China, report saysThe LG V30 will recognize your face even when its screen is offHere's how to turn off autoplay videos on Facebook and TwitterYou can honor Heather Heyer and other Charlottesville heroes starting todayWait, the price of Bitcoin is how much?'Deadpool 2' stunt person dead in motorcycle accidentUsain Bolt's final race ended with an unexpected injury, but he's still a legendPumpkin Pie M&M's are here and summer is now over thanks to brands'League of Legends' developer loses lawsuit for using soccer player's likeness14 people on TripAdvisor who were so disappointed by Big Ben Queen Cersei endorses Michelle Obama for President Reese Witherspoon's book 'Whiskey in a Teacup' is a delight Sikur turned a Sony smartphone into a secure, crypto Shop workers laugh at woman's shorts, she responds with kindness Aussies are baffled over something called 'Australian battered potatoes' The best Ryan Reynolds memes This tiny app solves the most annoying thing about Mojave's Dark Mode Third Eye Blind releases new song about police brutality Creating the playground of 'Marvel's Spider You need to know this hidden iOS keyboard trick Bernie Sanders gets booed after endorsing Hillary Clinton Speedrunner beats 'Super Mario Bros.' in unbelievable time Apple's iPhone XS Max is selling a lot better than XS, report claims Why Google wants search results to look like social media Facebook is tightening its grip on Instagram Instagram co Watch a mob of golf spectators swarm Tiger Woods as he clinches first win in five years Lorde's Uber driver tells her about the joy of meeting celebrities other than Lorde Michelle Obama's Democratic convention speech probably made your mom text you New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is putting children first
1.2739s , 10136.3359375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Romance Archives】,Evergreen Information Network