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The Banished

The Banished

Brainstorm Media (2024)
WEBRip Xvid
Horror
Australia | English | Color | 01:37

Grace has nowhere to turn when she finds herself lost in the wilderness with a dark presence threatening to consume her in this twisted folk horror.


Cast View all

Meg Clarke Grace Jennings
Nilson David Backpacker
Steve Brekalow Cultist
Hayley Buckley Junkie
Taylor Buoro Backpacker
Leighton Cardno Mr. Green
David Charles Collins Cultist
Adrian D'Arcy Priest
Gautier de Fontaine David Jennings
Paul Dowson Mortician
Connor Evarts Junkie
Vicki Gard The Organiser
Connor Hightower Junkie
Ces Hotbake Junkie
Randall Hua Backpacker
Cassandra Hughes Aunty Margy
Tony Hughes Uncle Rex
Miranda Michalowski Backpacker
Lawrence Ola Backpacker
Zara Paternoster Junkie
Hayley Pearl Junkie
Amelia Robertson-Cuninghame Colleague
Raphael Sikic Cultist
Di Smith Mother
Katie Sparrow Cultist

Trailer

Edition details

Packaging MP4
Nr Discs 1
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital 2.0
Subtitles English

Personal

Owner Jackmeats Flix
Location Horror Disk 1
Purchased On Oct 17, 2025 at YTS
Watched Oct 22, 2025
Index 11607
Added Date Oct 17, 2025 05:04:59
Modified Date Oct 22, 2025 01:31:54

Notes

My quick rating - 3.9/10. The Banished opens with a promising dose of mystery — a panicked woman named Grace (Meg Eloise-Clarke) bolts upright in her tent, screaming for a missing man named Mr. Green (Leighton Cardno). The forest around her looks lush, peaceful even, but the unease creeps in fast. It’s a strong start, one that hints at folk horror tension and psychological dread. Unfortunately, the film never quite lives up to that opening.

What follows is a slow and often confusing trek through the wilderness — both literal and emotional — as Grace searches for her brother David (Gautier de Fontaine). The story leans on flashbacks to explain how she ended up there, but instead of adding depth, they end up bogging the movie down. Nearly 50 minutes crawl by before we even catch up to that opening scene again, and by then, much of the tension has leaked out. The constant back-and-forth timeline feels less like clever storytelling and more like filler for a narrative that doesn’t have enough forward momentum.

Visually, the film has its moments. The forest setting is atmospheric, and there’s an eerie stillness that occasionally works in its favor. The cinematography captures the isolation well — lots of static shots, lingering on trees, shadows, and Grace’s anxious breathing. There’s some unsettling imagery scattered throughout, the kind that almost jolts the movie awake, but not quite. By the end, we’re given a quick montage of the film’s most striking moments, which unintentionally highlights how few memorable visuals there actually were.

Hints of deeper themes float to the surface, like a vague reference to an abusive father during Grace and David’s reunion, but it’s so underdeveloped that it barely registers. If the film was trying to say something about trauma, family, or the darkness that binds people together, it gets lost in the murk of slow pacing and restrained storytelling.

By the finale, The Banished seems to circle around an idea that “everything is for family,” but without a coherent emotional core or real plot to support it, that message feels hollow. Instead, we’re left with an atmospheric film of mood and suggestion — long on tone, short on substance. It’s a movie that wants to haunt, but mostly just lingers.

In the end, The Banished is the kind of folk horror that mistakes quiet for profound. While it looks decent and has flashes of something eerie beneath the surface, it’s too meandering, too static, and too unsure of its own purpose to really stick the landing.

Tags

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