One of the best Horror Movies of 2024
by Richard Newby
Chris Skotchdopole’s Crumb Catcher delivers a clever take on what I affectionally refer to as the “weirdos just showed up at your house” subgenre. It sifts through the tensions of class, career, race, gender, capitalism and ownership.
By the time newlyweds, Shane (Rigo Garay), a writer, and Leah (Ella Rae Peck) stay at a remote house for their honeymoon, tensions are already high between the two over Shane getting blackout drunk on their wedding night, unable to remember what transpired. Shane’s reservations over the book deal Leah helped him secure, Leah’s decision not to invite Shane’s father to their wedding, and her feeling over shared ownership of Shane’s career drives a further wedge between the two.
Tensions boil over when a knock at the door finds the pushy waiter John (John Speredakos) from their reception on their doorstep, with a one-of-a-kind invention in tow. Accompanied by his girlfriend, Rose (Lorraine Farris), a bartender who also worked the reception, John attempts to blackmail Shane and Leah over what transpired during Shane’s blackout. Without them as his business partners, there will be no money or names to generate interest in his revolutionary invention, The Crumb Catcher.
While John and Rose’s appearance initially results in an uncomfortable and absurd comedy of manners, tensions grow, and the situation devolves into unhinged lunacy as Shane and Leah are forced into a bloody fight for their lives. Deranged, topical, and surprisingly tender, even in its moments of violence, Crumb Catcher is a highlight of indie filmmaking, showcasing just what can be accomplished with an original idea, talented collaborators, and a vision that finds honesty in the messes people can make of their lives.
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