The Movie Waffler New Release Review - I WILL NEVER LEAVE YOU ALONE | The Movie Waffler

New Release Review - I WILL NEVER LEAVE YOU ALONE

I Will Never Leave You Alone review
A convict agrees to spend time in a haunted house in exchange for his freedom.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: DW Medoff

Starring: Kenneth Trujillo, Katerina Eichenberger, Christopher Genovese, Emma Anne Wedemeyer, Kimberly Maxwell

I Will Never Leave You Alone poster

Stories revolving around people accepting a challenge of spending a night or more in a supposedly haunted house are practically as old as the horror genre itself. With his second feature, I Will Never Leave You Alone, writer/director DW Medoff delivers a fresh spin on this premise, one which goes a long way to avoiding the question viewers inevitably find themselves asking during such movies - "Why don't you leave the house?"

I Will Never Leave You Alone review

After serving five years for an ambiguous crime, Richard (Kenneth Trujillo, a hybrid of George Clooney and Tom Sizemore) is released early for good behaviour. There's a catch though. Richard must take a job working for a real estate agent, and if he fails to perform his required duty he'll be straight back in the slammer. This is no typical real estate firm however, but one that specialises in flipping haunted homes (this is actually a genuine growing industry in the superstitious US). Richard is tasked with spending six days inside a home with a sinister reputation, the details of which he isn't initially made privy to, lighting a set of candles each day at dusk to exorcise the home of any lingering spirits. If he makes it through all six days he'll be paid $5,000. If not he'll be on the first bus back to the big house. Once inside, Richard doesn't have much choice as he's locked in by the realtor (Kimberly Maxwell).


Almost immediately Richard is disturbed by things going bump both day and night. He sees visions that might be dismissed as tricks of the light, but as they become more explicit Richard realises he is indeed sharing his temporary lodgings with something supernatural. But whatever demons are in the house aren't as disturbing to Richard as the ones in his head. Through flashbacks we see the disintegration of his marriage to Emma (Katerina Eichenberger) as he falls into a spiral of alcoholism and gambling. Things get worse when the couple have a child and Emma succumbs to post-partum depression, left alone at night while Richard gets drunk and flitters away their savings.

I Will Never Leave You Alone review

As the flashbacks become more ominous we begin to realise why Richard bears a nasty scar on his throat, which has destroyed his vocal cords. With a mute protagonist, much of I Will Never Leave You Alone plays out sans dialogue. Some backstory is filled in by Mike (Christopher Genovese), a friendly handyman who occasionally pops by to have one-side conversations with Richard through a window, but aside from the flashbacks Trujillo is required to communicate his brittle emotions non-verbally. It's an impressive, essentially dual performance. The angry drunk we see in Richard's memories and the sullen mute we now find at his lowest ebb are almost two entirely different people, the former reprehensible while the latter earns our sympathy through his silent pain.


Unspoken grief and trauma can eat away at a person's soul, and men are notorious for keeping such things to themselves. Given his state, Richard's torment is literally kept unspoken, but in Mike, who has his own demons, he finds a kindred restless spirit. As Mike details his own anguish we see a look of hope on Richard's face for the first time as he realises he isn't alone in his grief. If you watch I Will Never Leave You Alone for the shocks and scares, you'll be taken aback by its moving portrayal of men tortured by the bundled knots of pain they're unable to release.

I Will Never Leave You Alone review

While Medoff's film is surprisingly touching, it's first and foremost a horror movie, one that goes to some shockingly dark places. That we grow to care about Richard makes the story's various awful twists and revelations all the more impactful. The spirit Richard is menaced by in the house is that of a woman tortured in the belief that she was a witch. Like Richard, we feel sorry for the old crone but we also recognise her as a threat. Spilling the details of what he believes to be mere legend, Mike ponders why nobody ever asked the witch if she was okay rather than tormenting her, and we're left to wonder how many tragedies might have been avoided if those responsible had been asked the same question.

I Will Never Leave You Alone is on Arrow Player from March 10th.



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