A listless grand-daughter, Chance Sinclair (Avery Konrad), is sentenced to live with her draconian grand-father, August (Timothy V. Murphy) after a violent incident at school and begins to question the source of her families immense wealth and power. When Chance’s scheming Mom, June (Annette Reilly), hires a troubled chef, Sydney (Johnathan Lipnicki), to poison August, the family’s monstrous secrets are revealed over the course of one bloody night. Every soul is up for grabs as The Sinclair Family Games Night gets underway and Chance learns that being apart of this family is a blood-in, blood-out proposition. Broil 2020 full Movie
It’s not every day I stumble across a movie with no stars, no rating. I expected another failed attempt at a college film-school project. I have rarely been so delighted to have my expectations destroyed.
This movie slightly reminded me of the Twilight series, with a bit of Hannibal Lecter mixed in. The overall effect was good, with much less of a teen-aged love-story flavor. Some of the themes and plot elements are definitely more in line with a more serious “horror” genre than that other, lighter material.
Beautiful actors, acting, music, settings, and a thought-provoking story line. It’s a little bit hard to follow all of the details at some points, but they do all seem to mean something, and they are not so many that you can’t mostly keep up. Actually, I would watch this a second time, to finish examining some of the frayed edges. I suspect it would only lead me to a deeper appreciation of the quality of the fabric.
A different twist on familiar themes of angels, devils, and vampires was original enough to be interesting – and avoided beating those subjects even further into the ground.
Perhaps, after a second viewing, I would revise my rating of 7 stars upwards to 8 stars. I’ll see if I get back to it again sometime in the future. I have a feeling that I will. This one “stays with you” for a little while.