Director: Christian Carroll
Notable Cast: Briar Rose, Lydia Peckham, Katlyn Wong,
Joel Tobeck, Jonny Brugh, Rob Kipa-Williams, Bruce Hopkins, Bala Murali
Shingade, Beth Alexander, William Zhang
I’m a sucker for a good folk horror story. Throw in some
kind of ancient legend, told in rhyme and shown with stylized animation, and
put in a touch of body horror, and suddenly I’m doing a skip down the walk in
anticipation of seeing it. For The Burning of Broken Beak,
writer/director/editor/most everything under the sun Christian Carroll is
aiming for something of a modern folk horror tale and he manages to conjure up
something that feels like it owes its cornerstones to the folk horror of
yesteryears, but manages to modernize in a way that feels relevant and potent
for the last couple of years. While the film tends to play things slightly on
the safe side with its horror elements until its final act, spending much of
its runtime on a murder-mystery plot, it also packs an impactful amount of
dynamite into its final act, putting it above and beyond some of its indie
genre peers. And it certainly doesn’t feel bird-brained in the process.
Its central character, Emma, played by Briar Rose, returns
to New Zealand with her girlfriend from her life as a photographer in New York
to attend the reading of her adopted uncle’s will after he is horrifically
murdered. However, with a massive inheritance on the line, the family quickly
comes into odds with one another. It’s too bad, though, because their squabbles
have seemingly unleashed a curse upon the family of the old Māori legend of a
human-sized bird who was slaughtered when she stood up against colonists. Now
the family is being killed one by one, leaving Emma as the prime suspect.
Visions of Broken Beak haunt her, and Emma must uncover whether the curse is
real or if there’s more to her family than even she thought.












