Forced to stay in a new house with her mother and her new wife, the religious Carrie now lives with people she is at odds with. The story takes place over the first two days at the strange house, as Carrie's newlywed mom and her wife leave for a business trip and she must now watch over her young stepsister. As creepy occurrences lead to full blown terror, Carrie must fight to save her little sister.
Our first introduction to Carrie is her
being dressed up "because it's Sunday" and praying out loud
at the dinner table while her new family is visibly uncomfortable and
looking at her like she's a weirdo. The first thing she does is hang
up a cross, she apparently sleeps with a bible on her nightstand, she
goes to church her first full day there, and of course she listens to
Christian music. In terms of storytelling and writing, the character
of Carrie is nothing but a stock character at best and is based on
the laziest of cliches. The whole religious/gay marriage conflict in
the middle of a horror film felt a bit distracting from the film
itself and came across as a weak plot mechanism to create some sort
of drama to raise the stakes. Right away I started to get a bad
feeling about Home.
The film meanders for a while once it
hits the second act. The two moms leave on their business trip, some
odd things happen here and there, and...well that's about it. There's
the religious aspect to create conflict, the house that used to be
lived in by an old man who when he died was rumored “to never have
left” but unfortunately the script doesn't seem to know how to use
all of this to create a compelling story.
While watching her stepsister and
amidst the slightly odd but minor goings on, Carrie and her friend
Aaron, a boyfriend type who comes to visit, decide to rid the house
of any unwanted spirits. Because after about 20 minutes, Carrie
decides that's what must be in the house. So after a quick Google
search they find a do it yourself exorcism that is "sanctioned
by the church". So they do that and are on the couch kissing in
no time. I mean, after explaining that sequence of events, do I
really need to say why I didn't exactly dig this movie?
By the time anything really starts to
happen and the "horror" of this horror movie starts to take
place, there's about fifteen minutes left and at that point I just
didn't care anymore. The terror at the end probably should have
happened at the half way point and the story could have gone from
there, a true good (Carrie) vs. evil (the spirit in the house)
scenario. At least then her over the top religious convictions would
have actually meant something.
To say the least Home was a
disappointment. The bright spot in the film was seeing Heather
Langenkamp turn in a solid performance in a horror film again, she
does a really good job here. Maybe it's enough for some hardcore
horror fans to see Langenkamp again in a film like this in order to
watch Home, because that's the only real reason to.
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