Phil Hoad 

Lore review – Brit-horror anthology tells its gruesome stories around the campfire

Richard Brake is well cast as the host for this portmanteau of grisly yarns, where the girls’ tales are made of stronger stuff than the boys’
  
  

Lore.
More gore … Lore. Photograph: Kaleidoscope Home Entertainment

Anthology films are notoriously hard to pull off but, though it starts shakily, this low-budget British portmanteau has an ace in the hole: horror stalwart Richard Brake, whose grimy leer is normally a kitemark of something at least halfway chilling. (Hopefully his dental hygiene is better in real life.) In Lore, he is a Cryptkeeper-style host for four hikers out for an “immersive” experience in the wilds; informing them that they have pitched their tents above the site of some ancient evil, this campfire compere bids them bring forth their most blood-chilling yarns.

The boys, Mark (Dean Bone) and Dan (Miles Mitchell), think basic: the former trots out a warehouse runaround with gang fugitive Daniel (Andrew-Lee Potts) encountering a saw-toothed monster and a last-gasp psychological twist. Dan offers a boilerplate piece of gothic haunted house, in which a revenant ballerina (who has seen a few too many J-horror films) torments a mother and son. The horror mechanics in the latter, especially, are competently executed, but for a film called Lore there’s a basic lack of backstory or mystery in either.

Thankfully, the girls up the ante – and the comedy. Donna (Sally Collett) dreams up a hotel-set revenge story, with a lecherous husband (Rufus Hound) dragging his reluctant wife (Katie Sheridan) to a swingers’ night. It winds up like Ari Aster meets Alan Partridge, with a satisfyingly punitive gore policy. Lastly, Sally (Samantha Neal) steers the night down a meta path, with a giallo-style rampage kicking off in a multiplex where Gareth, the colossus who mans the concessions stand, gets his P45. Peppy and purposeful, both bits have a wry knack of putting daily mundanities to extreme use: suffocation in the popcorn bin is a new one.

Brake does his baleful best tying it all up, but the film drive things further into the meta woods in a garbled coda that uncertainly mashes reality and fiction. It feels cobbled together, but there’s just about enough attitude here to appease the horror hordes.

• Lore is on Icon Film Channel from 26 August and in UK cinemas on 27 September.

 

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