Showing posts with label Dark Fairytale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dark Fairytale. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

REVIEW: Dust Bunny (2025 Film) - Starring Mads Mikkelsen, Sophie Sloan, Sheila Atim, David Dastmalchian, and Sigourney Weaver

 

Bryan Fuller’s Dust Bunny arrives as something of an oddity, though in a good way. It is a fantasy action film that feels unlike most current studio releases and carries a strong sense of personal vision for a debut feature. Fuller relies more on atmosphere, fairytale logic and emotional instinct than on neat explanations. That choice gives the film a strange, lingering quality that keeps it engaging even when parts of the story falter.

The film follows Resident 5B, a worn down hit man played by Mads Mikkelsen, who is approached by eight year old Aurora after her family is brutally murdered. Aurora, played by Sophie Sloan, believes a monster under her bed was responsible. In her mind it was a literal bunny made of dust. The assassin suspects a far more human and dangerous explanation. The story that unfolds blends elements of an assassin thriller with childhood fantasy and horror. Much of the action takes place inside a New York apartment building that somehow feels both ordinary and quietly cursed.

Visually the film is often impressive. Fuller shows a confident sense of style, making strong use of colour, shadow and unusual imagery. An early sequence in Chinatown, where armed gang members hide beneath a dragon costume, immediately sets the tone and hints at the film’s strange blend of the fantastical and the grounded. Fuller allows scenes to breathe and is comfortable letting silence carry emotional weight. The film often trusts viewers to follow the feeling of a moment, even if the narrative logic occasionally slips.

Mads Mikkelsen delivers a strong performance. He brings his familiar physical presence and quiet threat, yet also reveals an unexpected softness. The way he moves between sudden violence and a calm, protective bond with Aurora becomes the emotional centre of the film. Sophie Sloan holds her own remarkably well, balancing fear, determination and an unsettling sense of certainty. Their connection gives the story its warmth. Sigourney Weaver also makes an impression as Laverne, adding an edge that strengthens the film’s darker elements.

The film does run into problems with pacing. Despite a running time of roughly one hundred minutes, the middle section begins to feel stretched as the story circles similar ideas. The shift towards larger scale action and mythic horror works in concept, though not every moment lands as intended. Some of the computer generated effects, particularly those involving the creature itself, are uneven and occasionally pull the viewer out of the experience.

The horror side of the story is also more intense than the premise might suggest. A few scenes are unexpectedly brutal, which places the film firmly outside the range of younger viewers despite its child centred perspective and fairytale tone. For some audiences this clash of innocence and violence will be intriguing, while others may find it jarring.

Even so, the ending is where the film truly finds its strength. Fuller closes the story on a note of hope rather than dread, suggesting that compassion and care are the only real protection against the monsters people create or inherit.

Dust Bunny is not without flaws. It begins strongly, slows during the middle, and finishes with confidence. What it offers above all is originality. This is a distinctive piece of fantasy horror supported by strong performances and a clear emotional core. For older teenagers and adults willing to embrace its unusual rhythm and rough edges, it leaves a lasting impression.

I enjoyed Dust Bunny and would give it a solid 8 out of 10. With tighter pacing and more refined visual effects, it might have reached an even higher mark.

Out now.

https://apple.co/4t7TwAK

Tuesday, 12 August 2025

REVIEW: The Death of Snow White (2025 Film) - Starring Sanae Loutsis, Chelsea Edmundson and Tristan Nokes

 

By Jon Donnis

The Death of Snow White takes the fairytale most people grew up with and shoves it headfirst into a pit of blood, occult rituals and feverish invention. Director Jason Brooks wastes no time tearing apart the clean, polished version and replacing it with something far darker. The opening alone sets the stage, with Chelsea Edmundson’s Queen slicing her own palm in the middle of a spell. From that moment, you know exactly what you have signed up for. It is dramatic, unashamedly violent, and makes no attempt to hide what it wants to be.

The forest setting is more than just a backdrop. It feels alive, a twisted labyrinth filled with shadows and strange predators. When Snow White, played with unexpected grit by Sanae Loutsis, finds herself in its depths, the whole energy of the film shifts. The dwarves here are not harmless miners or comic foils. They are cold blooded killers, each with such exaggerated traits that they almost tip into parody, yet somehow the tone makes it work. Watching Snow White slowly adjust to their brutal world is oddly rewarding. Brooks clearly wanted her journey from hunted girl to fierce avenger to feel real, and it does.

Chelsea Edmundson’s performance as the Queen is the beating heart of the film. This is not the usual vain and spiteful monarch. She is something much more dangerous, a woman who has already burned through every limit and is now exploring what lies beyond. The production design of her castle is both grim and captivating, and the magic rituals have a physicality that makes them memorable. The limited budget shows when the computer effects appear, but rather than detract from the experience, it fits the rough edged B movie personality of the piece.

The final act pulls no punches. The apple is not a delicate weapon of deception here, it is the trigger for a violent curse. What follows is a relentless battle where no one is safe, and characters you have grown to like are cut down without warning. The practical gore effects manage to be both stomach churning and inventive. Snow White’s ultimate fight with the Queen is raw and savage, ending with a moment involving Tiny’s axe that delivers the sort of bloody satisfaction fans of this style of horror will appreciate.

It is not perfect. The middle section loses momentum for a short stretch, and a few smaller roles are not as strong as the leads. Yet as a twisted, unrestrained reworking of the Snow White story, it is a triumph of gleeful excess. It may not be for everyone, but for those who enjoy their fairytales soaked in blood and chaos, this is one of the most entertaining takes in a long while. I left the film grinning, which is probably not the most comforting thing to admit.

Out Now

Apple TV - https://apple.co/3Hun5cP