We Are Still Here is a 2015 American horror film written and directed by Ted Geoghegan and starring Andrew Sensenig and Barbara Crampton as grieving parents who find themselves the focus of an attack by vengeful spirits. The film had its world premiere on 15 March 2015 at South by Southwest.[2][3][4]
Plot
In 1979, following the death of their son Bobby in a car crash, Anne and Paul Sacchetti have decided to move to a new home in rural New England. Paul hopes that it will be therapeutic for Anne, as the death has caused her to spiral into a deep depression. However, Anne starts claiming that Bobby is present in the house, and neighbor Cat McCabe warns them to leave. The house was built in the 1800s by the Dagmar family as a funeral home. The Dagmars were reportedly run out of the village after townspeople discovered that they were swindling their customers by selling the corpses and burying empty caskets.
Undeterred, Anne invites her friends May and Jacob Lewis as they are both spiritualists and could help to contact Bobby. The couples go out to eat, during which time the Lewises’ son Harry arrives with his girlfriend Daniella. Harry is killed by an apparition in the basement and Daniella flees in horror, only to be killed too. The Lewises and the Sacchettis head home, after which Cat's husband Dave arrives at the restaurant, murders a waitress, and angrily discusses the Dagmar house with the bartender, revealing that the house needs to feed every 30 years or the evil beneath it will search out fresh souls, destroying the town.
Jacob manages to convince a reluctant Paul to hold a séance with him while their wives are out. This ends with Jacob becoming possessed by the spirit of Lassander Dagmar, who reveals that they were never run out of town; rather the villagers used his family as a sacrifice to the evil under their home. Lassander, overcome with rage, causes Jacob to kill himself. His wife May tries to flee, only to be killed by Dave, who has come to the house with the other townspeople, determined to give the home what it wants. The Sacchettis hear the voice of Bobby urging them to leave, and flee upstairs as the townspeople break into the house.
The spirits of the Dagmar family proceed to violently murder most of the townspeople until only Dave, Paul, and Anne remain. Dave tries to kill Anne and Paul, but is killed by Lassander's spirit. As Paul and Anne stare at the carnage around them, the spirits of the family depart from the house, finally satisfied. Anne walks into the house's cellar after Bobby calls her, followed by Paul. As he peers down the stairs, Paul smiles and says "Hey Bobby."
Filmmaker Ted Geoghegan began work on the film as a tribute to The House by the Cemetery while working as a publicist for Dark Sky Films.[5] Geoghegan had previously collaborated with Andreas Schnaas on various "low-budget shlock movies" as a writer and producer, but had never directed a film beforehand. After completing the script, he showed it to Dark Sky Films and Travis Stevens of Snowfort Pictures, who both agreed to produce the film.[6]
The score was composed by Wojciech Golczewski. It was released on July 7, 2015 from Screamworks Records.[10]
Track listing
No.
Title
Length
1.
"The House"
4:45
2.
"Harry"
2:02
3.
"The Dagmars"
3:07
4.
"Bobby"
2:12
5.
"Cellar"
2:58
6.
"It's Not Bobby"
5:39
7.
"The Séance"
3:05
8.
"Dagmar's Story"
2:28
9.
"The Attack"
3:46
10.
"Accept It"
4:28
Total length:
34:31
Release
We Are Still Here had its World Premiere at South by Southwest on March 15, 2015.[11] It was given a limited U.S. theatrical release by Dark Sky Films beginning on June 5, 2015 and was released via video-on-demand the same day. It was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the U.S. on October 6, 2015.
The film was subsequently released on home video in Australia, Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, Scandinavia, Spain, and Taiwan. It opened theatrically in Japan on December 12, 2015[12] and in Russia on December 17, 2015.[13]
Reception
We Are Still Here was positively received at its world premiere[14] and subsequent release. It became one of the year's most critically acclaimed horror films.[15][16]Rolling Stone named it one of the year's ten best horror films.[17]Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports an approval rating of 95% based on 43 reviews, and an average rating of 7.09/10. The site's critics' consensus states, "Smart, powerfully acted, and devilishly clever, We Are Still Here offers some novel twists on familiar territory – and heralds the arrival of a major talent in writer-director Ted Geoghegan."[18] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 65 out of 100 based on 7 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[19]
Common elements of praise centered upon the film's atmosphere and visuals,[20] which Twitch Film called "stylish and mesmerizing".[21][22]Film School Rejects rated the film positively, praising it for its jump scares and stating that it "shows love and affection for genre".[23]