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MOVIE REVIEW: We see if 'It Feeds' satisfies horror fans' taste buds
MOVIE REVIEW: We see if 'It Feeds' satisfies horror fans' taste buds

Daily Record

time23-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

MOVIE REVIEW: We see if 'It Feeds' satisfies horror fans' taste buds

Little originality on show but still works. on its own merits - just. It Feeds stars Twilight's Ashley Greene as clairvoyant Cynthia who is forced into action to protect her daughter Jordan (Ellie O'Brien) and young stranger Riley (Shayelin Martin) from an evil entity. Writer-director Chad Archibald's ( Bite, The Heretics) horror film somehow gets away with sharing DNA with the likes of Insidious to still work on its own merits - just. ‌ Cynthia's personal experience of traumatic loss drives her decision-making and for much of the movie all that matters to her is Jordan's safety and avoiding confrontation. ‌ But Jordan leaps into action to help Riley, especially after engaging with Riley's aggressive, secretive dad Randall (Shawn Ashmore). O'Brien's infectious and endearing selflessness drives the flick and Jordan's fate quickly intertwines with Riley's. Greene and Ashmore actually starred together in 2021's decent but inexplicably long thriller Aftermath and do a good job here as the main adults on show. Greene's character is clearly torn between doing the right thing and her family's self-preservation and despite using increasingly extreme measures, all Ashmore's Randall is out to do is also protect his daughter. I could've done without Juno Rinaldi's kooky Agatha, who only seems to exist to give Cynthia and Jordan a helping hand when the plot requires it, and would like to have seen more of the always offbeat and fascinating presence of Julian Richings ( Dr Whittaker). ‌ I was also torn between thinking the climactic showdown sequence was cool or dumb. It's very Insidious, with characters entering a dark world through their minds, but the visuals are immersive and the environment threatening. Quite why everyone ends up wearing goth-like clothing and is styled with eye-opening hair and make-up is pretty bizarre, though. ‌ It Feeds won't win any points for originality, however, Archibald's latest horror dishes out just enough scares, meaningful motivations and stirring shots to satisfy genre fans' taste buds. ● Pop me an email at and I will pass on any movie or TV show recommendations you have to your fellow readers. Gerry Foster said: 'Gangs of London on Sky just keeps getting better and better. They really know how to up the ante.' *Don't miss the latest headlines from around Lanarkshire. Sign up to our newsletters here. And did you know Lanarkshire Live had its own app? Download yours for free here.

It Feeds review – spooky supernatural chiller that loads up on tasty jump-scares
It Feeds review – spooky supernatural chiller that loads up on tasty jump-scares

The Guardian

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

It Feeds review – spooky supernatural chiller that loads up on tasty jump-scares

There are two species of beastie horror: your robust, reality-tethered monster movie starring a hungry shark, rogue crocodile or big snake, and the more supernatural kind in which the malevolent entity is not human, but perhaps more human-ish – your Babadooks, Bughuuls and Nosferati. It Feeds is in the latter category, about a shadowy thing whose MO is attaching to people and, per the title, feeding on them. He'll seem familiar if you're au fait with the likes of The Conjuring and Insidious, but he is at least neatly realised by the FX team. Heading the human cast is Ashley Greene, known to Twilight fans as peppy clairvoyant vampire Alice Cullen. She is once more tapping into the supernatural here as psychic psychiatrist Cynthia Winstone, who is able to perceive the entity and is terrified of getting involved – although given the demands of the genre, we know that she will have to eventually. Also reporting for duty is former X-Man Shawn Ashmore, playing a twitchy father whose daughter (Shayelin Martin) is seeking deliverance from entity-based longueurs. In 2015, the breakout horror hit It Follows creeped audiences out via a supernatural game of tag with a shape-shifter whose attentions were sexually transmitted. It Feeds isn't officially related but, in both its title and the idea of an unknown thing targeting people in a particular sequence, there are echoes. One for the jump-scare crowd, It Feeds is light on gore but heavy on the dark spooky wraith guy with thin, sinister fingers. It may not stick around in your memory with the persistence demonstrated by the entity towards its victims, but it passes the time chillingly enough. It Feeds is on digital platforms from 12 May.

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