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There isn’t much you can do with the fantasy genre anymore, especially
with the short film format, but lo and behold, director Adam Bolt finds
a way by making his fantasy characters much less cutesy padding, but
much more incredible symbols of unrequited love, unspoken misery, and
demons of the past that simply won’t stay dead. Bolt’s direction is
morbid enough to where even the most light hearted moments are filled
with dread and spooky plot elements that always keeps “Vanished Acres”
on the border of horror. The true reason to see “Vanished Acres” is for
Bolt’s absolutely fantastic and whimsical direction in which a man on
the brink of insanity thanks to loneliness and his inability to let go
of his past, comes face to face with a condescending scarecrow who is
absolutely smug, but for good reason. Since created, seemingly by
omnipresent forces in the land, he’s seen more than anyone could care
to, and bears this power over Jarod, who he knows more than Jarod knows.
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He holds the power, he holds the secrets, and Jarod hates
him for it, especially when he discovers an old love letter
from his wife who passed years before. The exchanges between
Jarod and the scarecrow are absolutely superb, and Bolt
keeps a healthy dose of gripping ambiguity that creates a
sheer sense of menace in this dramatic tale. Is this
scarecrow actually alive or is Jarod just going insane from
loneliness? |
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Or perhaps it's just his conscience taking a toll on his
life, after tucking it away most of his life?
Is this scarecrow a higher force ruining Jarod’s garden purposely? Is
this raven much smarter than we think? John Riley almost runs away with
this movie as the decrepit old man who lives in a museum of his past
unwilling to face a truth that this scarecrow, acting as his constant
psychological nemesis, teases him with. Riley grabs every single scene
by the heart and provides a truly grueling portrait of this old man who
refuses to walk away from his delusion. Matthew Solari is excellent as
the ghoulish as this rather elitist scarecrow who taunts and torments
Jarod, paired with his raven who is also a very questionable second hand
in the pair. Is the animal a messenger, a sidekick, or the true master?
More importantly, will Jarod ever face his actual reason for staying in
this mausoleum of lies and falsehoods? Bolt’s film is very much of a
Terry Gilliam throwback, and it simply took my breath away.
Adam Bolt’s
short dark fantasy is wonderful, it’s a tight, chilling, and incredibly
acted drama about lost dreams, delusions we stick to, and the unusual
methods we can come to grips with a life that we never wanted.

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