
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Brendan Muldowney
  Starring: Elisha Cuthbert, Eoin Macken, Abby Fitz, Dylan
    Fitzmaurice Brady
      Writer/director Brendan Muldowney's 2004 short
        The Ten Steps is one of the most effective and economical
        pieces of horror storytelling imaginable. It runs for just 10 minutes
        but boasts a twist worthy of MR James, Rod Serling or the best of EC
        Comics. Now, two decades later, Muldowney has expanded his short into a
        feature length film. In the process he's lost the concise impact of his
        earlier work, but he introduces some intriguing new ideas.
    
    
      If you acquire a massive house for "practically nothing" in an auction,
        you should probably ask some questions. If said house is in Ireland,
        with its astronomical property prices, there's definitely something
        afoot. Yet Keira (Elisha Cuthbert) and Brian (Eoin Macken)
        do just that, acquiring a small mansion for a steal. Their teenage
        daughter Ellie (Abby Fitz) is none too happy about the move, but
        their young son Steven (Dillon Fitzmaurice) takes to his new home
        immediately.
    
    
      One evening Ellie disappears after going down to the property's spooky
        cellar to trip the fuse box. The police are stumped. Everything suggests
        Ellie just vanished into thin air within the house. Beginning her own
        investigation while Brian frowns in classic horror movie husband
        fashion, Keira delves into the history of their new home. She uncovers a
        past of similar disappearances and even learns that physicist Erwin
        Schrodinger once lived in the home.
    
    
      Muldowney comes up with the rather fascinating concept that the house
        itself is something of a Schrodinger's box, in which its inhabitants are
        neither dead nor alive until they leave the house, much like the cat
        from his famous theory. Elements of Jewish mysticism are brought into
        the story, while the influence of Lucio Fulci's Gates of Hell films is
        palpable, particularly in a late sequence that resembles the Italian's
        vision of Hell in The Beyond.
    
    
      These various elements never quite coalesce into a satisfying
        narrative, and the movie relies a little too much on watching its
        protagonists googling the meaning of Latin quotations. And wouldn't you
        know it, there's an old record that when played through a gramophone
        conjures up all manner of nastiness. Given how novel his original short
        was, it's disappointing to see Muldowney rely on so many clichés for his
        feature length expansion.
    
    
      But Muldowney does a good job of establishing an eerie atmosphere
        throughout. Along with cinematographer Tom Comerford, he shoots
        the NorthWest of Ireland with the same rain-soaked and overcast sheen
        that Hollywood films have employed for thrillers set in the Pacific
        NorthWest ever since Gore Verbinski's remake of The Ring. For a relatively low-budget Irish production it's surprisingly slick.
        Don’t be surprised if the likes of Blumhouse come calling for
        Muldowney.
    
    
      The Cellar is on Shudder UK now.
    
    