I enjoyed it for the different take on slasher films. I may not be rushing back to watch it but I'm glad I did.
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Pretty much my take as well. I like how they set the mood with the long walking shots.
Indeed it brought home how stuff between the kills is really just filler but also those quiet moments really contrast well with the outbreaks of ultraviolence.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
But that doesn’t mean that you can’t appreciate innovative variations on the premise: an original choice of weapon, perhaps, or particularly haunting motivation, or indeed a memorable mask.
Chris Nash’s low-budget slasher qualifies as one of the more interesting formal variations; the weapons are not unusual (hooks feature prominently), the motivation is fairly standard (a Jason-style past wrong), and a fun but not that outlandish mask (a vintage firefighter’s mask).
Where Halloween’s iconic score followed Michael Myers wherever he went, In a Violent Nature is almost devoid of music; set almost entirely outdoors in a national park, you can hear birds tweeting and not much else.
The film is fond of a static camera too, with long, locked-off wide shots and slow pans replacing the standard roving or hectic horror visuals.
Horror is a genre with strong heavy metal connections, but this is the acoustic, unplugged cover version: it hits all the same beats in the melody, but without the power chords.
Gruesome and disgusting, yes, but not scary; if you’re looking to get your nerves actively shredded, you might have to seek out other men in masks to accept that particular mission.
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