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    Pig Hill (2025)

    After a series of women going missing, a young woman decides to investigate the Pig People, a local legend that has haunted her since her childhood.

    Hard watch, but for the wrong reasons.

    It’s always difficult to rate films like Pig Hill because the usual criteria don’t really apply. The story itself is actually quite interesting, but the execution is rough – partly because of the small budget and partly because director Kevin Lewis and production outfits like Bloody Disgusting seem perfectly comfortable operating in this particular corner of horror cinema. And that corner is very specific: cheesy, neo-noir-infused slasher horror with a deliberately forced atmosphere, abrupt editing that tries too hard to scare you, exaggerated lighting, and a tone that constantly sits somewhere between wannabe serious and self-aware.

    Nothing in Pig Hill feels natural or particularly polished, but perhaps that is entirely the point. It does not try to be Wrong Turn (2003), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974/2003), or The Hills Have Eyes (1977/2006). Those films aim for brutality, tension, and psychological discomfort in a more realistic way. Pig Hill, on the other hand, feels like it belongs to a different subculture of horror – one that embraces incoherence, perversity, rough filmmaking, and questionable narrative logic as part of its identity rather than as weaknesses.

    From a conventional filmmaking perspective, there are many issues. The acting is uneven, the shot composition is sometimes strange, the editing is as abrupt as it gets, and the film’s approach to mental illness and psychology is, at best, nonexistent. If you watch it expecting a tightly constructed horror film, you will almost certainly be disappointed.

    But here is the strange part… sometimes you are just in the mood for exactly this kind of film. The kind of horror that is objectively flawed, occasionally ridiculous, technically messy – but still oddly watchable if you willingly enter its world. This is not a film you stumble upon and admire. This is a film you choose to watch because you want something rough, strange, and unapologetically low-budget.

    It’s bad – but the kind of bad you can forgive yourself for watching. On a rare occasion.

    But if you are looking for a genuinely strong nano-budget horror featuring Shiloh Fernandez, I would strongly recommend Deadgirl (2008) instead. That one is definitely worth revisiting.

    Thanks for reading!

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