
A Dark Path
2020 · 75m
Synopsis
Two girls in Eastern Europe are on their way home from a hen party in a car with no GPS signal. They're headed for a very unusual forest. Local people will not venture into this forest.
Trailer
Cast
Makenna Guyler
Abi
Mari Beaseley
Lilly
Thomasin Lockwood
Hanna
Jimmy Essex
Peter
Annabelle Mackinnon-Austin
Jessica
Grace Long
Claire
Elle Anderson
Club dancer
Ade Dimberline
The Creature
Eric Iverson
Club dancer
Emma Louise Smith
Club dancer
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Comments
10 Comments
source: A Dark Path
Had to use closed caption to understand dialogue. What bothered me after they found the second car, was why didn't they think to get that cars spare. Both cars were small size models. Spare would have worked. Change out movie over. Been best to leave out finding second car.
As low budget UK horror films go, this one at least kept my interest. A lot was left to the imagination (always a good thing for me). Yes, I know this kind of genre has been done to death, and the acting was a little more than wooden. However, as mentioned before, it held my attention. I do recommend this to those of us that can still use our imagination.
I would have rather that the movie just be 74 minutes of dark and silence. This was really annoying but I did make it to the end with the creatures and the lights!!!! Nice one. 2/10
Mediocre idea of a film that was fairly acted. But nothing special. Ultimately a creature feature that was too low budget. And the plotting wasn't flushed out well. Add an abrupt ending for no conclusion, this film falters majorly. A couple extra stars went for the lead actresses.
Waste of rental money. Tedious. Lacking in any atmosphere or tension. Poor acting. Ist year film school project but with bigger budget?
Two female characters with a contentious relationship, travelling alone at night on a lonely, deserted road in the middle of nowhere. A murderous creature stalks them. This basic premise applies to both "A Dark Path" and to "The Monster", but the latter is by far the better of the two movies. Based on other reviews that I read here, I expected "A Dark Path" to be much worse than it actually was. The relationship between the uptight, authorative older sister and the smart alecky, free-spirited younger sister was carried off well enough by the two lead actresses. When their rental car breaks down, they don't do anything abysmally stupid, like splitting up and wandering off in the dark to find help. The tired old "Oh no, there's no cell service here!" ploy is used, though. "The Monster" managed to avoid falling back on this stale trope, and actually uses the fact that there IS cell service to add to the creature's body count. As with the female lead in ""The Monster", there are emotional revelations between the two sisters in "A Dark Path", but it takes a lot longer for anything to actually happen in the latter than it took in the former, in terms of the creature in each movie. The creature effects in "The Monster" were much, much better. "A Dark Path" isn't the worst monster/horror movie that I've ever seen, but it is much closer to the worst than it is to the best.
Some potential with no delivery. Took forever to get to path. Took forever for cheap antagonist to be revealed. Worst inconclusive ending ever.
Wow this British film is so amateurish. I don't know what camera in which this movie is filmed but it looks so dated. It feels like a low budget TV movie made in the 1990s. Please avoid as the monster also look like it was taken from a computer game from that era or a cheap wannabe swamp thing. Ps this film is very dark but maybe it is done to hide the deficiency of this cinematography.
Seriously...Is the worst movie I've watched so far😤😤. Who the h£ll directed this movie. So what went through their minds after watching it themselves. For this kind of movie, I bet anyone can direct 🚶🚶