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The vault review
The vault review






the vault review

Silhouetted, head tilted to the side and a disgusting sickly gargle emerging from its mouth, the effect is terrifying. Thinks perk up a little when the underground vault is finally wedged opened and a demonic presence makes its first appearance. Tossing every horror cliché imaginable into the pot, it plays on genre conventions while including various copycat shots of haunted looking doorways (The Shining), creepy black and white security camera footage (Paranormal Activity) and mask wearing nasties (Halloween). The family drama used to set up the drama now hampers the plot and diminishes any tension. Yet the story slowly begins to falter around the halfway mark.

the vault review

Matters kick off with an intricately shot bank heist, something director Dan Bush should be proud of. Mayhem ensues when the crew are sent down to an underground vault where something truly evil lurks. Starring James Franco in his 11th film of 2017 (so far) The Vault revolves around two sisters as they attempt to rob a bank with their brother as a way to help solve his money problems. Unfortunately though, the similarities become more frequent and the film seems to reject any attempts at originality. It’s a promising start to this mystery/horror hybrid which gives off a Tarantino-esque vibe of bloody pulp and pop culture savvy.

the vault review

This film opens up with gruesome shots of dead bodies and violent images of murder while ‘Crimson and Clover’ by Tommy James & The Shondells blasts out from the speakers. James Franco makes a fleeting appearance in this mediocre supernatural heist flick.








The vault review