After the death of their father, a brother and sister must attempt to set aside their differences to settle the estate of an old family farm. Things are more complicated than they first seem, however, as a long forgotten family history begins to have strange consequences in the modern day. What these siblings don’t know about their ancestors might prove dangerous, and could have contributed to the death which has brought them back together.
One of the more unusual films to feature at FrightFest, The Ones You Didn’t Burn (2022) is hindered by an opening suffering from a level of cinematography considerably deficient than the rest of the film. These inconsistencies with the level of production value are somewhat rectified for the most part but these initial scenes are perceivably amateurish in composition as well as feature an uneven sound balance. Consequently, this switch in quality only highlights these rougher scenes, featuring professional displays of stable crossfades built from multiple shots only exacerbating this visual fluctuation. Sometimes shots are beautiful, and perfectly constructed in beautiful locations. Other points lack a similar undertaking, constructing whatever was quickest and calling it a day after a single take.

This could be symptomatic of limited resources, yet The Ones You Didn’t Burn never devolves into a total mess. The crew is especially adept at getting footage from vehicles, as well as shooting in near total darkness with a level of artistry that big-budget films can struggle to achieve (both are usually challenging to capture) but these scenes are certainly one of the film’s highlights. Nevertheless, the overall quality absolutely improves past the first act, although despite this upgrade, The Ones You Didn’t Burn‘s slow-boil plot barely saddles the edge of the horror genre. Light on conventual scares, this psychosexual drama explores modern feminist ideas of witchcraft mixed with a traditional role of antagonist that can equate to alarmingly horny situations at points. Contrary to the film’s foundational themes, these scenes offer an entirely different tone than one would otherwise expect – the slow pace almost complements this aspect.
Although The Ones You Didn’t Burn certainly lacks traditional horror elements, its implementation of drama and mystery tries to earnestly atone for this – promoting an ambiguous undertone through experimental storytelling. However, the sluggish tempos’ lack of progression ultimately provides an uneventful experience overall. Undoubtedly, an escalation in the film’s elements of horror, as well as a better distribution of content throughout would have helped polish a story created by a skilled team of filmmakers into a better final product instead of feeling frustrated at the wasted potential on show.

Although The Ones You Didn’t Burn is produced by a competent crew, it doesn’t feel like it works as a standalone narrative. The opening is debilitated, the overall flow never seems to be truly engaging, and the finale needed to go hard to pay off such a slow burn yet remained low-key throughout. This is an admirable situation of trying and not succeeding though, as opposed to being lazy or filmed without passion, once the credits roll the feeling viewers will likely be left with is that of wanting to see what Writer/Producer/Director Elise Finnerty does next. Unfortunately, that leaves The Ones You Didn’t Burn in an awkward spot as a showreel piece that almost, only doesn’t quite, hold up on its own merits.

We watched The Ones You Didn’t Burn (2022) at FrightFest

Past Festival Coverage
In the aftermath of the Omega Pandemic, a devastating global catastrophe that has turned citizens into zombie-like monsters, a teenager named Salvador has become the caretaker of his younger siblings,… Proposing itself as an intimate look at a killer, Eri’s Murder Diary (2021) caught my attention among the many titles at Japan Film Fest Hamburg. Directed by newcomer Koji Degura,… Fishmonger is a 2023 Irish supernatural horror comedy, written and directed by Neil Ferron with additional writing from Alexandra Dennis-Renner. Not his first time behind the camera, Neil is known… Returning for its 6th year, the Dead Northern Film Festival is back to deliver another top line-up of spooky shorts and features to one of the world’s most haunted cities–York,… TikTok dances emanate eerily around you, a cacophony of booming cackles emit from influencers as they forcefully push their latest merch (that was most likely made in some far-off, exploitative… Slasher and revenge horrors could be said to be two sides of the same coin; in one, you are following the victims, and in the other, you are following (and…Párvulos (2024) Film Review – Blood is Thicker Than Water [Fantastic Fest 2024]
Eri’s Murder Diary Film Review – The Broken Mind Of A Killer
Fishmonger (2023) Film Review – A Tale As Old As Time [Fantastic Fest]
Dead Northern Film Festival (2024) Short Films Day 1 – Scares Aplenty
#Chadgetstheaxe (2022) Film Review – Cancel Culture Gone Awry (Unnamed Footage Festival 666)
Piggy (2022) Film Review – Spanish Revenge Horror Slays

Luke Greensmith is an Editor at the Grimoire of Horror and an active folklorist as well as working in film across a few roles. While this can cover quite a wide range of things, he’s a dedicated horror fan at heart and pretty involved with horror communities both online and local to him. You can find their folklore work on the Ghost Story Guys Podcast, their own LukeLore podcast, and accompanying the artist Wanda Fraser’s Dark Arts series as well as on the Grimoire of Horror itself.