
Antlers
2021 · 99m
Synopsis
In an isolated Oregon town, a middle-school teacher and her sheriff brother become embroiled with her enigmatic student, whose dark secrets lead to terrifying encounters with an ancestral creature.
Trailer

Cast

Keri Russell
Julia Meadows

Jesse Plemons
Paul Meadows

Jeremy T. Thomas
Lucas Weaver

Graham Greene
Warren Stokes

Scott Haze
Frank Weaver

Rory Cochrane
Daniel LeCroy

Amy Madigan
Principal Ellen Booth

Sawyer Jones
Aiden Weaver

Cody Davis
Clint Owens
Lyla Marlow
Jasmine Drury

Jesse Downs
Harrison Crawford

Arlo Hajdu
Arlo Kebbins

Dorian Kingi
Antlered Man

Ken Kramer
Dr. Gerald Ferguson

Dendrie Taylor
Carol Reynolds

Andy Thompson
Father Meadows
Jake T. Roberts
Forensic Officer

Glynis Davies
Nurse Lorraine Byrd
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Comments
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Steeped in dark, grim & brooding atmosphere yet failing to capitalise on it to fully realise its ambitions, Antlers begins on a promising note but it doesn't take long for the film to devolve into a frustrating slog. It tries to be too many things yet doesn't have the discipline or clarity to deliver the desired goods. There is plenty it wants to say yet has no idea how to articulate it right. Co-written & directed by Scott Cooper (Black Mass), the story does create the right sort of intrigue with its foreboding mystery but the human drama that unfolds is not only bland but also inauthentic. Cooper is unsure of what road to take and plays with several ideas hoping some would somehow stick. The balance between its genre elements is off, and the themes aren't properly handled either. On the plus side, the creature design, gore effects & moody camerawork is worth a mention but the plot & characters don't have that gripping quality to it that would make us care. Still, the actors do what they can to make the journey worthwhile but it doesn't amount to a lot in the end. The problem lies with the script itself that required more fine-tuning to figure out its identity and what themes to address or discard. Overall, Antlers strives to be a supernatural horror rooted in indigenous folklore, an allegory about unresolved trauma, drug addiction & child abuse, and also an environmental parable, all at the same time, yet falls remarkably short on nearly all fronts. Its premise had potential but its execution is dry & directionless, thus resulting in a tedious & disappointing genre fare that in an effort to say several things ends up saying nothing at all.


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