Are subjective horror movies having a moment? It all depends on your point of view. Last summer the Canadian thriller In a Violent Nature differentiated itself from the usual slasher shlock by telling its story entirely from the perspective of its lethal antagonist. In traditional Friday the 13th style, a group of innocent but slightly annoying college kids were stalked in the woods by a mute hulk. But the camera never left the killer, hovering behind his wheezing frame as he stomped relentlessly towards his panicky victims.
Earlier this year the prolific director Steven Soderbergh belatedly dipped his toe into horror with suburban ghost story Presence. This time the camera became the point-of-view of a lingering spirit, floating through a family home to observe, and occasionally mess with, the occupants. Making the audience feel like they were a roving wraith – a wraith rover? – put an immersive new spin on familiar spooky material.
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Which brings us to Good Boy, another wannabe scary movie with an atypical take on perspective. It involves supernatural happenings at a creepy cabin in the woods complete with adjacent graveyard. So far, so rote, you may think. The twist is that the lead actor has four legs, a wet nose and a waggly tail. Indy is a scrappy but soulful little retriever with such heightened senses that he can detect the presence of ghosts while his ailing owner Todd (Shane Jensen) remains oblivious.
Filming a horror from the knee-level perspective of a dog is a good gimmick, and anyone who has looked on in mild exasperation as their pup freaks out at seemingly nothing may feel a twinge of recognition. But constantly barking dogs are also rather annoying. It helps immensely that Indy – who, rightly, gets top billing in the credits – is a remarkably self-composed, mostly silent actor with an impressive repertoire of
meaningful looks that range from upsettingly fearful to doggedly determined.
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