post_page_cover

Schism Featured, Reviews Film Threat

Oct 6, 2024

Lost arts from indie film lore are revived and unleashed in the spectacularly campy spine-tingler Schism, written and directed by Thor Moreno. One day, Nola (Cait Moira) walks into the house, opens the bedroom door, and starts screaming at what she sees inside. Four years later, she is locked in a mental institution as no one believes her about what happened. She has dreams of running through the woods in a white dress, with a dark demon watching her through the branches. Her best friend, Mara (Cheyenne Goode), offers Nola what support she can, as she has serious troubles of her own.
After confirming that Nola is no longer claiming to see ghosts, she is informed that she and Mara are being transferred to another facility. The new place is more experimental and is supposed to be much less stringent with more privileges, as it is on an island. The night before leaving, Nola is hopeful, but Mara is very anxious and does not feel good about the move at all. Nola wakes up the next morning and is informed there is a hanging. Going to the island alone, Nola is surprised that there are not only no guards but there are also no other patients.

“…Nola wakes up the next morning and is informed there is a hanging.”
Nurse Clemmy (Annette Duffy) informs her that Doctor Sherry (Hunter Phoenix) works with her “guests” individually, so it will be just them during her treatment. It all follows the methods laid out by the center’s founder. When Nola asks who the founder is, she is told it is none of her concern and to never, ever go into the basement. The first thing Doctor Sherry does is hand Nola a pill and demand she take it. She gives in and wakes up 24 hours later with no memory of what happened. Then she starts seeing other people on the island no one else is supposed to be on…
Schism caught me off-guard, as it has been years since I have run into a movie like this. I was even skeptical at first, thinking that I was being put on by director Moreno. There were a few scenes right away where the camera work was noticeably clumsy, such as that jerk that comes with panning up and down when you haven’t loosened that last screw on the tripod. There were also some sequences where the styling seemed overly exaggerated, with the synthesizer score going completely overboard.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Over 2 Years Later, Hulu’s Historical Romance Feels Like a Completely New Show

In 2023, Hulu quietly released The Artful Dodger over the holiday season. The series presented itself as an inventive twist on Charles Dickens’ Victorian masterpiece, Oliver Twist. But rather than focusing on Dickens’ titular orphan, the series took the eponymous…

Feb 7, 2026

Mickey Haller Faces the Ultimate Test in His Own Murder Trial

There’s an old legal adage that says, “A man who represents himself has a fool for a client,” but not every man is Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo). If you’ve watched the previous three seasons of the Netflix series The Lincoln…

Feb 7, 2026

The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants Review

It raised more than a few eyebrows when The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants was selected as a closing night film at AFI Fest. It made more sense within the screening’s first few minutes. Not because of the film itself, but the…

Feb 5, 2026

28 Years Later: The Bone Temple Review: An Evolving Chaos

Although Danny Boyle started this franchise, director Nia DaCosta steps up to the plate to helm 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, and the results are glorious. This is a bold, unsettling, and unexpectedly thoughtful continuation of one of modern…

Feb 5, 2026