The Movie Waffler New Release Review - BLACK CAB | The Movie Waffler

New Release Review - BLACK CAB

Black Cab review
A sinister London cabbie takes a bickering couple to a haunted stretch of road.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Bruce Goodison

Starring: Nick Frost, Synnøve Karlsen, Luke Norris

Black Cab poster

It's never good when a character in a movie tells a story and it turns out to be far more compelling than the actual movie itself. That happens early on in Black Cab. At a dinner to announce his engagement to his long-suffering girlfriend Anne (Synnove Karlsen), controlling shitheel Patrick (Luke Norris) relates an urban legend-esque tale of a woman driving home late at night and realising she's being followed by another car. It's a cracking piece of economical storytelling, filled with tension and boasting a terrifying denouement. It's everything Black Cab isn't.

Black Cab review

Far from pacey and economical, the effect of watching director Bruce Goodison and writer David Michael Emerson's supernatural thriller is like finding yourself stuck in rush hour traffic for 90 minutes. It gets off to an intriguing start that promises a fun ride but quickly runs out of narrative gas.


Following their dinner party, Anne just wants to go home alone but Patrick insists on accompanying her. They hail a black cab and set off. The anonymous driver (Nick Frost, who is also credited as writing additional material with Virginia Gilbert) is initially jovial and chatty in that classic London cabbie manner. He even senses Anne's discomfort and offers to kick Patrick out of his cab. But things take a dark turn when the cabbie tasers Patrick with a cattle-prod, knocking him unconscious. Anne is bound in the backseat as the cabbie takes the couple to Maybell Hill, a stretch of road he claims is England's most haunted.

Black Cab review

For all its supernatural elements, Black Cab is essentially a survival thriller. As the audience, our motivation is to root for Anne to free herself from this desperate situation. But the film breaks a storytelling 101 rule by practically removing any hope that Anne might be able to escape. Any half-decent thriller sets up goals for the protagonist to aim for, as if the audience believes they're truly hopeless we simply stop caring. Anne is as hopeless a heroine as you could find, and the movie barely offers so much as a morsel of hope to keep us invested. She's literally tied up in the back of a cab being driven down a road with no other traffic for most of the run time, and the film barely teases any way in which she might get out of this predicament.


With our protagonist practically out of the picture and doing nothing to disrupt the narrative, we're left to listen to the cabbie ramble on as he essentially explains the plot while glancing over his shoulder. You can see why Frost was drawn to the role as it allows him to indulge his usual comedy shtick while also giving him the opportunity to play an intimidating villain. He's very good in both aspects, but the more we learn about the character the more contradictory he becomes. Once we learn the cabbie's true motivation it just doesn't make sense that he would have been playing this scenario for laughs for so long.

Black Cab review

Every woman has a fear of getting into a cab with the wrong driver, so a movie with Black Cab's premise is onto a winner straight away. It's remarkable then that it fluffs its lines so badly and fails to exploit the claustrophobic tension of its initial setup. I'd wait for the next one if I were you.

Black Cab is on Shudder from November 8th.



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