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‘The Canyonlands’ and 8 of Horror’s Most Unforgiving Environments

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A setting is integral to creating mood and atmosphere in horror. More than that, backgrounds contribute to shaping the narrative. How a character interacts with their environment can play a dramatic role in their survival. Among horror’s most prominent settings, nature is the harshest. Nothing is as unforgiving as mother nature, and the wilderness adds brutal complications for the protagonists. Fighting off a monster, ghost, or psychopath becomes so much harder when battling the elements as well, especially for inexperienced protagonists ill-prepared to cope with nature.

That promises to be the case in The Canyonlands.

In this slasher, an adventurer guide hesitantly accepts a job to take five contest winners on a rafting trip down the Colorado River in Utah. The adventure quickly takes a deadly turn when the group camps off the river for the night. They find out that they’re not the only ones out in the remote canyonlands, and it doesn’t want them to leave.

The Canyonlands marks the feature debut by writer/director Brendan Devane. Scored by Brendan Bayliss and Jake Cinninger from Umphrey’s McGee, the slasher stars Stephanie Barkley, Marqus Bobesich, Jesse Buck-Brennan, Ari Anderson, Dennis Connors, and Lauren Capkanis.

The Canyonlands is available now on VOD. For its release, we’re taking a look at eight of horror’s most unforgiving environments.


A Lonely Place to Die

Five friends embark on a trip to the Scottish Highlands for hiking and mountaineering. It gets off to a harrowing start, and that’s before they stumble upon a young kidnapped girl. Her kidnappers don’t take too kindly to the intrusion, and a dangerous cat and mouse game ensues. From rock climbing to treacherous rivers below, everything about this environment is unforgiving. It lends to some intense sequences.


Anaconda

Low IMDb Ratings

Things get deadly when a documentary crew gets accosted by a snake hunter on the Amazon river. Evading a giant anaconda snake and a ruthless hunter would be enough for anyone, but the Amazon and its surrounding jungle offer no shortage of ways to die. That quickly becomes clear when the crew’s leader gets stung by a large wasp that made its way into his scuba regulator during a dive. Or when the boat gets trapped thanks to debris blocking the river passage.


Cold Prey

This slasher is nestled in a secluded area deep within the snowy mountains. A group of friends decides to venture off the beaten path for their snowboarding getaway, but that choice turns fatal when a leg break causes them to seek shelter at an abandoned lodge. They discover its home to a masked maniac. The isolated winter location presents many obstacles for survival, including a lack of cell service and perilous ravines.


Crawl

A daughter and her injured father face off against territorial alligators in the crawlspace beneath the house. Compounding the life-or-death situation is a raging Category 5 hurricane, causing rapid floodwaters. It’s a series of highly suspenseful obstacles for the pair and the family dog, and they didn’t even have to leave the house- nature found them.


Frozen

Breaking the rules seldom pays off in the genre. When a trio of friends talks a ski lift operator into giving them a free pass up the mountain for one last run down before closing, they’re forgotten in a mishap. Stranded and abandoned on a mountain resort now closed for the week, the friends face frostbite, hypothermia, starvation, and a pack of hungry wolves down below. With no help in sight, these characters must take drastic measures to survive.


The Lodge

At first, nothing seems particularly unforgiving about the comfy winter lodge at the center of this film. What’s meant to be a relaxing holiday getaway for family bonding turns into something far more harrowing when dad gets called away on business. A stepmom’s plans to thaw icy tensions with two angry children derail after a power outage leaves them without heat or water. Then stepmom’s sanity starts to crumble. It’s a chilling reminder of just how close the threat of nature lurks, waiting for one false step.


Ravenous

A remote Army outpost on the fringes of the western frontier proves particularly treacherous for those stationed there when a stranger arrives with a tale of his caravan murdered by a rogue guide. When a group sets out into the wilderness to verify the claims, they realize far too late they’ve let a dangerous person into their den. The remote location in a cold, mountainous region makes it difficult for the protagonists to seek help. Outside of a murderous maniac, they also have to contend with frostbite and hunger.


The Ruins

Step one in horror survival: avoid uncharted areas at all costs. Friends on vacation in Mexico learn the hard way when they opt to visit an archeological dig deep in the jungle. They get trapped on a Mayan pyramid by hostile locals, who are quarantining them due to the carnivorous plant that inhabits the ruins. The sentient, gruesome nature of the vines makes for one of the most ruthless movie monsters. Still, the protagonists face severe dehydration, starvation, and an assortment of heat-related ailments under the blazing sun.


The Canyonlands is available now on VOD. 

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

Editorials

From ‘It Follows’ to ‘Longlegs’: Maika Monroe Has Defined a Decade of Horror

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When we think about legendary Scream Queens from the world of horror, it’s usually iconic final girls or empowered assassins who jump to mind – women like Jamie Lee Curtis and Sarah Michelle Gellar most associated with an iconic role despite a multitude of successful genre titles in their extensive catalog. While these beloved actresses will always be part of the horror landscape, newer Scream Queens have begun to diversify. Anya Taylor-Joy and Mia Goth have both broken their horror bones in a variety of outstanding genre films and continue to surprise us with unexpected roles. But of the many young actresses vying for Modern Scream Queen status, one woman rises to the top of the list.

For the past decade, Maikia Monroe has been reinventing the horror genre and her own cinematic legacy one complex role at a time. The California girl who once dreamed of a career as a professional kite-surfer, excels in the juxtaposition of vulnerability and strength and often plays meek characters who eventually find empowerment. Though every horror fan has their favorite Maika Monroe performance, the star is known for more than a single role or particular subgenre. This month sees the accomplished actress tackle the police procedural in Longlegs, a psychological thriller with a satanic core. Already being praised as her best performance to date, Monroe draws from a long list of relatable heroines that have made her one of the genre’s most beloved and versatile Scream Queens.


It Follows (2014)

Monroe made her film debut alongside genre royalty with a background role in the 2012 Piper Laurie vehicle Bad Blood. Having taken the job on a whim, Monroe turned her eyes from the sea to the screen and fell in love with the transformational power of acting. Two years later, she would become an overnight star with the lead in David Robert Mitchell’s harrowing It Follows. Regarded as a stand-out film of the new millennium, this terrifying tale falls somewhere between a rape-revenge narrative and a haunting creature feature. Monroe is Jay, a woman plagued by a sexually transmitted ghost that follows wherever she goes. With the ability to look like anyone and everyone, this shape-shifting entity pursues her relentlessly one step at a time, hellbent on tearing her body apart. The only way to survive is either to endlessly run or pass the curse on by sleeping with someone else. Monroe’s vulnerable performance in a challenging role allowed survivors of sexual assault to see their pain reflected onscreen while displaying the lasting effects of emotional trauma. Though intentionally ordinary in her quiet relatability, Jay’s strength lies in finding the courage to connect with other people rather than succumbing to the darkness of isolation and shame.


The Guest (2014)

The Guest

That same year, Monroe starred in The Guest, an action horror film from Adam Wingard. The film follows David (Dan Stevens), an discharged soldier who visits the family of his fallen friend. Despite a jaw-dropping performance from the talented Stevens, Monroe steals the show as Anna, a restless twenty-year-old trying to move on with her life. Though initially suspicious, she warms up to the dashing soldier after a fight with her boyfriend. But a call to the local recruitment center reveals that the mysterious guest staying in the next room is not who he claims to be. With his secret revealed, David unleashes his violent power on anyone who tries to stand in his way and the rebellious Anna must do what she can to save what’s left of her fractured family. The Guest is known for its fun action sequences including a bloody battle in a Halloween funhouse, but under this action-packed surface lies a touching story about trauma and loss with Monroe’s Anna shouldering much of the emotional burden. These dual breakout performances not only made Monroe one of the most sought-after actresses in horror, but allowed her to avoid the dreaded pitfalls of typecasting. With two strong characters who find empowerment through different paths, Monroe displayed her unique ability to capture the audience’s heart no matter what situation she finds herself in.


Greta (2018)

After a series of mainstream fare including the blockbuster sequel Independence Day: Resurgence, the sci-fi nightmare Tau, and Michelle Schumacher’s imaginative drama I’m Not Here, Maika returned to the world of horror with a pair of bizarre films that defy classification. In Neil Jordan’s Greta, she stars alongside French icon Isabelle Huppert and Chloë Grace Moretz – arguably a scream queen in her own right. Monroe plays Erica, the best friend of a woman targeted by a sadistic female stalker. At first blush, Greta (Huppert) appears to be a harmless older woman in need of companionship, but her burgeoning friendship with Erica’s roommate Frances (Moretz) soon takes a horrific turn. The film is a unique blend of buddy comedy, chick flick, and psychological thriller that sees Monroe elevate what could easily be a stereotypical role. More than a cinematic device to amplify the terror, Erica becomes an avenger who will stop at nothing to rescue her friend – even if it means stepping into the fire herself.


Villains (2019)

Villains Shudder

The following year, Monroe would star as an outlaw with a heart of gold in an equally nebulous film opposite one of Hollywood’s reigning Scream Kings. Villains, a dark comedy horror from Dan Berk and Robert Olsen, pairs Monroe with Bill Skarsgård on the heels of his successful reimagining of Pennywise the Dancing Clown in Andy Muschietti’s It. With the cops on their tail, bank robbers Ruth (Monroe) and Mickey (Skarsgård) break into an unassuming home only to find a horrific secret lurking in the basement. Criminals become victims as the house’s owners take the couple hostage and create a nightmare version of suburban utopia. George (Jeffrey Donovan) and Gloria (Kyra Sedgwick) are a bizarre pair determined to have a picture perfect life but their polished personas hide a deep well of murderous insanity. Monroe navigates this bizarre setup and proves not only to be the audience’s conduit, but the heart and soul of this chaotic film. Without her steady hand and grounded performance, we could easily become lost in the wild and weird turns of this outlandish horror comedy.


Watcher (2022)

Monroe next made waves in the genre sphere with Watcher, a psychological horror film from Chloe Okuno. This haunting story follows Julia (Monroe), an American actress who moves to Bucharest when her husband Francis (Karl Glusman)is transferred for work. Still learning the language, Julia spends her days wandering aimlessly through the streets and staring out the picture window of her lonely apartment. She soon spies another solitary soul who seems to be watching her with disturbing intensity. Meanwhile, a killer known as the Spider haunts the city, severing the heads of vulnerable women. When Julia reports her stalker, she’s met with dismissal from the police and scorn from her distracted husband. She’s left alone to defend herself against a vicious killer in a strange city with no help in sight. In many ways a spiritual successor to It Follows, Watcher is a chilly tale of relentless terror that explores the dangers of loneliness and isolation. Monroe commands the screen in a quiet, but intense performance that builds to a shocking conclusion and cathartic release.


Significant Other (2022)

The same year would see Monroe reunite with Berk and Olsen in Significant Other, a sci-fi horror tale following a doomed couple on a weekend hike. Monroe is once again paired with an actor fresh off his own breakout role as co-star Jake Lacy had just captured attention as the unlikeable lead in HBO’s hit series The White Lotus. But Monroe’s part in the story is arguably more challenging as Ruth, a young woman terrified of romantic commitment. After rejecting a marriage proposal from the charming Harry (Lacy), Ruth notices something strange about her partner’s demeanor. Confused and alone, Ruth leaves the trail and discovers the lair of a shape-shifting entity from another world. This ambitious role allows Monroe to stretch her legs as varying versions of the same conflicted character. Part survival horror, part alien invasion, part Marriage Story, Monroe once again helms a film that resists genre classification. With her trademark vulnerability, she delivers a complex performance that asks the audience to decide who Ruth really is while challenging us to ask the same question of ourselves.


God Is a Bullet (2023)

God is a Bullet Maika Monroe

Though Monroe has starred in a number of diverse horror features, she specializes in empathetic heroines who fight back against oppressive darkness. Rarely has she played a villainous or unlikeable character in a genre film. But that all changed with Nick CassavetesGod Is a Bullet, a bleak story concerned with the murderous crimes of a satanic cult. Monroe is Case, an off-putting survivor who bristles at vulnerable human connection. Having recently left the sinister family, Case is now left to deal with the trauma of her own childhood abduction and a decade of sex trafficking and physical abuse. Though ostensibly the protagonist, Case is covered in black tattoos and resists acts of kindness with cutting insults and anti-religious diatribes. In an intense performance, Monroe wrestles with the terror of letting down her guard and shows relatable vulnerability amidst overt strength. But the talented actress still manages to capture our hearts though her character is doggedly trying to push everyone away.


Longlegs (2024)

Longlegs final trailer

Ten years after her breakout role, Monroe is poised to deliver her best performance to date in Oz Perkins’ Longlegs, a harrowing police procedural thriller-turned occult horror film already being hailed as the scariest of the year. Starring opposite Nicolas Cage (also turning in a career-redefining performance) Monroe is Lee Harker, a young FBI agent with suspected psychic abilities. Assigned to a disturbing cold case, Harker begins to search for the titular serial killer (Cage), a satanic murderer with terrifying influence. Her stunning performance evokes the sensitive power of Jodie Foster’s oscar-winning turn in The Silence of the Lambs, a role that turned the veteran actress into a genre icon. Monroe pulls in elements of her own previous roles as the grounded, but relatable heroine of Perkins’ pitch black film, demonstrating an uncanny ability to channel the audience’s fear. With a number of eclectic roles under her belt, Longlegs proves there’s nothing the talented actress can’t do. Already horror’s reigning Scream Queen just twelve years into her career, there’s no doubt we’ll be screaming along with Maika Monroe in diverse and thrilling films for decades to come.


Longlegs arrives in theaters tomorrow. Get tickets now!

The upcoming serial killer horror movie marks the return of director Osgood Perkins (The Blackcoat’s Daughter, Gretel & Hansel). Nicolas Cage stars alongside Maika Monroe, with Monroe playing an FBI agent and Cage playing a serial killer.

In the film, “FBI Agent Lee Harker (Monroe) is a gifted new recruit assigned to the unsolved case of an elusive serial killer (Cage). As the case takes complex turns, unearthing evidence of the occult, Harker discovers a personal connection to the merciless killer and must race against time to stop him before he claims the lives of another innocent family.

The film is rated “R” for “Bloody violence, disturbing images and some language.”

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