It’ll startle and spook, but it also doesn’t feel incredibly original, which is an odd failure for a story that has chosen to focus on a very original threat.
Her parents are a bit confounding and frustrating too — as she becomes increasingly paranoid and scared (which seems reasonable after she witnesses the shocking death of a classmate, regardless of whether it was an invisible demon or rabid wild animal) they respond like she’s just a delinquent who has broken curfew or been caught skipping school. The only one who seems to care and listens is her teacher (Get Out’s Betty Gabriel), which does not put her in the good graces of the vindictive, flesh-eating Pishacha.
The story also doesn’t really grapple enough with the intriguing themes of assimilation, alienation and identity once the monster is at large — perhaps it’s because we’re simply plopped in the middle of a mystery that doesn’t give us enough to really care about anyone involved. One kid’s already dead. Tamira is already weird. Sam is already cool.
It Lives Inside is still a welcome respite from the other long-in-the-tooth horror franchises populating theatres this time of year in that it’s just something new — new faces, new themes, a promising filmmaker to watch — but I wish it would have embraced more of the things that make it unique as opposed to trying to fit in with its genre brethren. Sort of like Sam. I mean, Samidha.
It Lives Inside, is rated R16 for teen drug use, brief strong language, bloody images, terror, violent content.
Running time: 99 minutes.
Two stars out of four.