A college class project on creation and destruction of modern myth, turns terrifying when a trio of young people come to realize the urban legends surrounding the famed Buckout Road may, in ... Read allA college class project on creation and destruction of modern myth, turns terrifying when a trio of young people come to realize the urban legends surrounding the famed Buckout Road may, in fact, be REAL.A college class project on creation and destruction of modern myth, turns terrifying when a trio of young people come to realize the urban legends surrounding the famed Buckout Road may, in fact, be REAL.
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I honored the acting (of many of the performers) and overall production values of this film with a 5. They had a nifty idea for a film, following a number of films of a "haunted road", and they added more to it to enrich the concept away from typical tropes. The problem I found with all these additions is that they didn't add up to anything whole. The film ultimately has a simple narrative that is a "surprise" at the end. Ho hum, not much of a surprise. The various elements become confusing as if they melded several short film ideas into this overall concept. And this led to characters having one dimensional qualities that didn't do justice to what they were experiencing. It is creepy enough that I wanted to see the whole film, but I started the crossword puzzle halfway through it.
Sure, while I had actually never heard about the 2017 horror movie "The Curse of Buckout Road" prior to stumbling upon it here in 2025, of course I opted to watch the movie on account of it being a horror movie that I hadn't already seen. And I am a big fan of all things horror after all.
But talk about a swing and a miss from writers Shahin Chandrasoma, Matthew Currie Holmes and Johnny Pascucci, because the storyline in the movie was one of the dullest and most boring ones I've sat through in a long, long time. The pacing of the narrative was sluggishly slow, and there just wasn't much of anything interesting happening to spruce up the otherwise dull movie. So it was not a great horror experience.
The acting performances in the movie were fair, despite the fact that the script was rubbish. There were some familiar faces on the cast list, with the likes of Danny Glover, Henry Czerny and Colm Feore.
Visually, then the movie was okay. It wasn't exactly a movie that were throwing special effects left and right. But whatever effects were in the movie were fair enough.
If you enjoy horror movies, then "The Curse of Buckout Road" is not a movie that I would recommend. Nor is it a movie that will ever grace my screen a second time.
My rating of director Matthew Currie Holmes's 2017 movie "The Curse of Buckout Road" lands on a very generous three out of ten stars.
But talk about a swing and a miss from writers Shahin Chandrasoma, Matthew Currie Holmes and Johnny Pascucci, because the storyline in the movie was one of the dullest and most boring ones I've sat through in a long, long time. The pacing of the narrative was sluggishly slow, and there just wasn't much of anything interesting happening to spruce up the otherwise dull movie. So it was not a great horror experience.
The acting performances in the movie were fair, despite the fact that the script was rubbish. There were some familiar faces on the cast list, with the likes of Danny Glover, Henry Czerny and Colm Feore.
Visually, then the movie was okay. It wasn't exactly a movie that were throwing special effects left and right. But whatever effects were in the movie were fair enough.
If you enjoy horror movies, then "The Curse of Buckout Road" is not a movie that I would recommend. Nor is it a movie that will ever grace my screen a second time.
My rating of director Matthew Currie Holmes's 2017 movie "The Curse of Buckout Road" lands on a very generous three out of ten stars.
It could have been real good, but never made it, the ending made the whole thing waste of time. Too bad it had potential. Stupid Ending.
This film was a fine example of way too many ideas shoved into a meandering, sloppy, almost laughable mess.
You couldn't find a coherent storyline in this script with a magnifying glass and a flashlight. And your heart really goes out to these poor, mostly mediocre, actors trying to claw there way through this mish-mosh in order to make some sense of it. When one of the main charcters "suddenly" figures out what and why anything is happening, the revelation just drops out of the sky. You could see the unoriginal "twist" ending a mile away. This one os just for the "auteur's" friends and family.
You couldn't find a coherent storyline in this script with a magnifying glass and a flashlight. And your heart really goes out to these poor, mostly mediocre, actors trying to claw there way through this mish-mosh in order to make some sense of it. When one of the main charcters "suddenly" figures out what and why anything is happening, the revelation just drops out of the sky. You could see the unoriginal "twist" ending a mile away. This one os just for the "auteur's" friends and family.
This movie is rife with odd incongruities. Various story beats, bits of dialogue, and otherwise elements are at times characterized by being tropes, too neat and clean to be believable, too smart or clever for its own good, or too ham-handed. That includes, for example, the highly stylized visualization of characters' dreams, where a simple descriptive monologue would have sufficed. Another great example: exposition and background lore provided by characters by way of a documentary-style video, a college project - inserted very pointedly when it's seemingly needed most. On top of all this, first time writer-director Matthew Currie Holmes has managed to assemble some very noteworthy names and faces to appear in his feature debut, including Danny Glover, Colm Feore, Henry Czerny, and Dominique Provost-Chalkley.
Most peculiar of all is that I don't think any of this is an accident. We get some jarring imagery, an air of mystery, a minor sense of suspense, and a modestly absorbing story. But 'The curse of Buckout Road' is also full of overarching yet underhanded cheeky humor and a quirky playfulness. Moments of would-be emotional weight are glossed over in such a matter-of-fact fashion as to render them perfunctory. It's all a weird mish-mash of contrasting and clashing ideas, moods, and tactics.
I don't dislike it. I also don't entirely know what to make of it.
Holmes' screenplay seems strangely (staggeringly?) adaptable. This movie could have been a straightforward horror thriller. It could have been a straightforward horror comedy. It could be a drama, a psychological thriller, a B-movie romp - all with just a few tweaks. Instead, Holmes elected to more or less blend all these aspects into a single feature. It's an interesting method, and I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with it. However, these disparate aspects do not mesh together with complete success. In trying to do and be so much, 'Buckout Road' doesn't allow any facet to be realized with all its due. Thrills are diminished, shock is dampened, actors are restricted, and our fun is somewhat weakened.
None of this is to say it's bad. I like the narrative. While Glover, Czerny, and Feore aren't given a great deal to do by comparison, Provost-Chalkley defies the constraints of the production to turn in an entertaining, varied performance with all the dexterity we know she's capable of. I'm not especially familiar with star Evan Ross, yet even as his lead role is likewise delineated for him, I think he handles the spotlight well. And I actually really like the ending.
I just wish it were all more consistent.
You could do a lot worse. This is entertaining, and where it succeeds, it excels. Where it falls short, it's dubious. The greatest deficiency of all is just an overabundance of notions all forced into the same picture. I don't begrudge anyone for particularly disliking this - I want to like it more than I do. Ultimately, 'The curse of Buckout Road' is a horror-thriller for viewers receptive to a smorgasbord of storytelling approaches, and if you can abide the complications, this is a pretty good time.
Most peculiar of all is that I don't think any of this is an accident. We get some jarring imagery, an air of mystery, a minor sense of suspense, and a modestly absorbing story. But 'The curse of Buckout Road' is also full of overarching yet underhanded cheeky humor and a quirky playfulness. Moments of would-be emotional weight are glossed over in such a matter-of-fact fashion as to render them perfunctory. It's all a weird mish-mash of contrasting and clashing ideas, moods, and tactics.
I don't dislike it. I also don't entirely know what to make of it.
Holmes' screenplay seems strangely (staggeringly?) adaptable. This movie could have been a straightforward horror thriller. It could have been a straightforward horror comedy. It could be a drama, a psychological thriller, a B-movie romp - all with just a few tweaks. Instead, Holmes elected to more or less blend all these aspects into a single feature. It's an interesting method, and I don't think there's anything inherently wrong with it. However, these disparate aspects do not mesh together with complete success. In trying to do and be so much, 'Buckout Road' doesn't allow any facet to be realized with all its due. Thrills are diminished, shock is dampened, actors are restricted, and our fun is somewhat weakened.
None of this is to say it's bad. I like the narrative. While Glover, Czerny, and Feore aren't given a great deal to do by comparison, Provost-Chalkley defies the constraints of the production to turn in an entertaining, varied performance with all the dexterity we know she's capable of. I'm not especially familiar with star Evan Ross, yet even as his lead role is likewise delineated for him, I think he handles the spotlight well. And I actually really like the ending.
I just wish it were all more consistent.
You could do a lot worse. This is entertaining, and where it succeeds, it excels. Where it falls short, it's dubious. The greatest deficiency of all is just an overabundance of notions all forced into the same picture. I don't begrudge anyone for particularly disliking this - I want to like it more than I do. Ultimately, 'The curse of Buckout Road' is a horror-thriller for viewers receptive to a smorgasbord of storytelling approaches, and if you can abide the complications, this is a pretty good time.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Oldest Urban Legend of Buckout Road is about the Legend of the Great White Deer form the early 1600's. Natives claimed during a full moon, the land would be visited by a mysterious large white deer which would bring good fortune and success to the individual who saw it appear. from Eric Pleska's book Buckout Rd.
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Aaron Powell: He may be coming... but he ain't coming tonight
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- The Curse of Buckout Road
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- Sudbury, Ontario, Canada(2016)
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- 1h 37m(97 min)
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