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FANTASIA 2018: UNFRIENDED: DARK WEB Movie Review

Unfriended: Dark Web (2018) - Movie Poster
Courtesy of BH Tilt / Universal

UNFRIENDED: DARK WEB (R)

Fantasia 2018 Film Festival Review
Released by BH Tilt
Review by Adam Mast


2015’s supernatural-tinged online thriller UNFRIENDED was made on the cheap and proved to be a modest hit so a follow-up was inevitable. Interestingly enough, though, DARK WEB isn’t a sequel in the traditional sense. This movie is entirely different in terms of story but it uses the same online-inspired backdrop.

In UNFRIENDED: DARK WEB, a group of online chat buddies from entirely different areas and backgrounds are eventually caught up in a deadly game involving human trafficking and the kind of profoundly disturbing antics that would appeal to the unsavory types at the heart of Eli Roth‘s HOSTEL. The plot is set into motion when twenty-something Matias (Colin Woodell) discovers strange files on his newly acquired laptop while engaging in a heart to heart conversation with his hearing impaired girlfriend, Amaya (Stephanie Nogueras.) What follows is a nasty bit of nihilistic business that is, in part, designed to serve as a cautionary tale to our current social media generation, but it also serves as a cynical and all together disturbing reflection of this culture.

Unfriended: Dark Web (2018) - Movie Still
Courtesy of BH Tilt / Universal

Whereas the first UNFRIENDED had a supernatural vibe, DARK WEB goes for a more grim, reality based slice of horror. That said, the bullying message at the center of the first picture went a long way to make it a stronger film overall. DARK WEB by contrast sets out to drive home the unnerving notion that there are a lot of sick people out there who take the utmost pleasure in the suffering of others.  It should also be noted, though, that this film has a semblance of a moral center in the form of a flawed Matias who, at the very least, does what he can to take on the Dark Web in an effort to protect his girlfriend, his fellow chat buddies, and a missing young woman whom he doesn’t even know.

Unfriended: Dark Web (2018) - Movie Still
Courtesy of BH Tilt / Universal

Admittedly, I found the first 15 minutes of this picture pretty boring. Who wants to sit through an entire movie that takes place on a computer screen? Quite frankly, it reminded me of being at work. Furthermore, everything is a little busy and frantic, what, with the constant pop-ups and message screens appearing all over the place. But then, as was the case with the first UNFRIENDED, this film gets a little more involving as it  moves along. Not perfect, mind you. There are hokey moments, a few ridiculous plot developments, some overacting, and plenty of telegraphed scares (including the kind of cat-jumping-on-the-window-sill jolt that we’ve seen 100s of times), but there’s also something to be said for the concept at the heart of these films. The UNFRIENDED series sort of does for the internet generation what THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT did for found footage, granted, this is certainly a more limited sub-genre in terms of its gimmicky desktop hook.

Unfriended: Dark Web (2018) - Movie Still
Courtesy of BH Tilt / Universal

As for the performances, DARK WEB benefits from a mostly appealing, multi-cultural cast (i.e. Rebecca Rittenhouse, Betty Gabriel, Connor Del Rio, Chelsea Alden, Andrew Lees, and Savira Windyani.) Woodell is particularly effective in the lead.  It would have been nice had Nogueras (who just so happens to be hearing impaired in real life) been given a little more to do here, particularly given that this movie is coming on the heals of a more effective A QUIET PLACE, a creature feature that also focused on a character with a hearing impairment (played by a magnificent young Millicent Simmonds.) Aalas Nogueras is saddled with more of a thankless, damsel in distress role in DARK WEB. Still, she makes the most of what she’s been given to work with and she and Woodell do manage to generate genuine chemistry.

In terms of tone, UNFRIENDED: DARK WEB is a bleak, cynical, downer of a movie but that’s how a lot of genre fans like their horror. It doesn’t always fire on all cylinders and the premise is certainly stronger than the overall execution but DARK WEB does offer up plenty to think about. And at the very least, there’s little doubt that after watching this movie, many viewers will think twice before clicking on unfamiliar files on their newly acquired laptops.


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