Hangman (2015 film)

Last updated
Hangman
Hangman poster.jpg
Official poster
Directed byAdam Mason
Written by
  • Simon Boyes
  • Adam Mason
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography Tobias Deml
Edited by
  • Adam Mason
  • Jeremy Sisto
Music byAntoni Maiovvi
Production
company
Hiding in the Attic
Distributed by Alchemy
Release dates
  • 14 March 2015 (2015-03-14)(SXSW)
  • 9 February 2016 (2016-02-09)(United States)
Running time
85 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Hangman is a 2015 British thriller film, directed by Adam Mason, and co-written by Mason and Simon Boyes. The film stars Jeremy Sisto, Kate Ashfield, Ryan Simpkins, Ty Simpkins, Eric Michael Cole, and Amy Smart. The film had its world premiere at SXSW on 14 March 2015. [1] The film was released on video on demand and home media formats on 9 February 2016 by Alchemy. [2]

Contents

Plot

A woman calls 911 to report an intruder in her home. Having already hanged the man of the house with a noose, serial killer Hangman instructs the woman to say she loves him before violently stabbing her.

Hangman secretly records Aaron Miller, his wife Beth, their daughter Marley, and young son Max as they embark on vacation at the Burbank airport. Once they leave, Hangman breaks into the Miller family’s minivan and uses the vehicle’s GPS to drive back to their house. There, Hangman watches their home movies, installs hidden cameras, establishes a surveillance suite in the attic, and begins secretly living inside the Miller home.

The Millers return home to find their house ransacked. Aaron also discovers a hangman drawn in ketchup on the shower tiles as well as a mannequin torso hanging from a rope in the attic.

As the Millers put the house back together and resume their regular lives, Hangman continues living there in secret while regularly stalking the family members as they sleep. Hangman also secretly follows Beth and Marley when they go out in public. Beth starts hearing noises and seeing clues around the house suggesting that someone might still be there as Hangman deliberately moves and manipulates items to keep the family suspicious and unsettled.

While alone in the house to fix the toilet, handyman Miguel finds one of Hangman’s cameras embedded in the bathroom wall. Hangman surprises Miguel from behind and suffocates him with a plastic bag.

Hangman scares Beth with a popped light bulb to stop her from investigating the attic after she hears another strange sound. Beth suggests purchasing a gun to feel safe and Aaron agrees.

Marley notices Hangman recording her while she makes out with her boyfriend Miles at a Lovers’ Lane. Miles confronts Hangman, but the teenage couple drives away when they become creeped out by his unresponsiveness.

Aaron and Beth host dinner for Beth’s friend Melissa and Melissa’s husband. While the quartet dines, Hangman goes through Melissa’s purse. Max is woken by banging on the roof. Beth notices that someone urinated on the floor in the upstairs hallway and assumes it was Max.

Hangman steals the report card Marley was hiding from her parents and puts it on Aaron and Beth’s bed. Marley blames Max for giving the report card to their parents.

While cleaning Max’s bedroom, Beth finds a drawing of a faceless man dressed in black. Max explains that the figure is Jimmy, a man who sometimes visits him in his dreams. Max also claims that Jimmy told him Melissa is not the good person that she seems to be.

Hangman masturbates and cries to himself while watching Aaron and Beth have sex. Hangman drugs a bottle of wine and does something unseen to Beth while she is unconscious.

Hangman has an emotional breakdown while perusing a Miller family photo album. He later puts lipstick on one of Aaron’s shirts and also places a condom in the pocket to present an appearance of infidelity.

Hangman follows Marley and Miles to the carousel at Griffith Park and murders Miles in the bathroom. He then sends Marley a text from Miles’ phone to make it look like the boy stormed off in anger.

Beth discovers that she is pregnant. After Beth finds the shirt Hangman tampered with, Max tells his mother that Jimmy saw Aaron kissing Melissa.

Beth confronts Aaron over his presumed affair when Aaron comes home. Their argument is interrupted by noises upstairs. Aaron grabs the gun when he realizes that there is an intruder in their home. He investigates the attic, but Hangman kills Aaron and drops his body from a noose. Holding Beth at gunpoint, Hangman assumes Aaron’s identity and instructs Beth to say she loves him. After Beth says, “I love you,” Hangman shoots her in the head.

Hangman returns to the airport with his video camera and begins stalking another family as they leave for vacation.

Cast

Production

Sisto and Mason had worked together previously on music videos. Sisto was excited when Mason contacted him to see if he was interested in collaborating on a feature film, as it was the first time Sisto had produced a film. [3]

Release

Hangman was selected for the 2015 South by Southwest Film Festival. It premiered there on 14 March 2015. [4] In September 2015, it was announced Alchemy had acquired distribution rights to the film. [5] The film was released on 9 February 2016 through video on demand and home media formats. [6]

Soundtrack

Antoni Maiovvi's soundtrack was released digitally and on vinyl via Giallo Disco Records in 2016. [7]

Real Life Similarities

Theodore Edward Conyes, called the Denver Spiderman, was a man who was having a hard time during the early 1940's. He thought to ask his friend, Philip Peters, for help but when he arrived at Peters's home no one was there; so Conyes let himself in. As he went through the home he found a small room above a closet and he took up residence within it. For the next 5 weeks Conyes occupied the tiny space and would only come out when he heard Peters leave. But, there came a day when Conyes thought Peters had left the home however it turned out that he hadn't and was only napping. As Conyes came down to find some food he made enough noise to wake Peters up. Upon being discovered Conyes beat Peters to death and instead of running away he just went back up into the small space he'd been occupying. The police couldn't figure out how someone had killed Peters since the house was locked up at the time of the murder; with even the windows being closed. The house was thoroughly searched and the small space was even discovered, but it was never investigated as it was believed the cubby hole that led to the small room itself was too small for someone to fit. After some time however Conyes was discovered and sentenced to life in prison.

Back in 2008 a gentleman in Japan, who lived alone, started noticing food missing from his home, he thought he was sleepwalking, or maybe he was absent minded, but when it kept happening over and over again over a one year time span he grew suspicious. He finally had enough and set up hidden cameras all over his apartment thinking that there may be someone breaking in. Shortly after installing the cameras they picked up a woman emerging from a small upper storage space the gentleman never used. She would eat his food, watch his tv, she even used his shower while he was gone. He called the police who discovered the 58 year old woman who actually had a small mattress in the tiny space. She admitted to using the gentleman's shower and eating his food but never stole anything else.

Reception

The film received mixed reviews from film critics. Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter wrote: "Unfortunately, despite its provocative premise, the film, which recently received its world premiere at SXSW, offers only sporadic moments of creepiness." [8] Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote: "An effectively creepy spin on found-footage horror, Hangman finds a family unwittingly playing host to a malevolent intruder who's broken into their home – and stayed there, unseen, while watching their every move on surveillance cameras he's installed." [9] Patrick Cooper of Bloody Disgusting rated it 2/5 stars and wrote, "Hangman looks better than most found footage films. But the lack of characters to attach ourselves to, the drab killer, and the predictability really hamper what could've been an interesting little film." [10] Dominick Suzanne-Mayer of Consequence of Sound rated it C and wrote that "you’ve seen this movie before, and you’ve absolutely seen better iterations". [11]

See also

Related Research Articles

<i>Timecop</i> 1994 film by Peter Hyams

Timecop is a 1994 American science fiction action film directed by Peter Hyams and co-written by Mike Richardson and Mark Verheiden. Richardson also served as executive producer. The film is based on Timecop, a story created by Richardson, written by Verheiden, and drawn by Ron Randall, which appeared in the anthology comic Dark Horse Comics, published by Dark Horse Comics. It is the first installment in the Timecop franchise.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeremy Sisto</span> American actor (born 1974)

Jeremy Merton Sisto is an American actor. He is known for his roles as Billy Chenowith in HBO's Six Feet Under, NYPD Detective Cyrus Lupo in NBC's Law & Order, George Altman in the ABC sitcom Suburgatory, for which he was nominated for a Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actor in a Comedy Series, and Jubal Valentine in the CBS drama series FBI. He has appeared in such films as Clueless (1995), Suicide Kings (1997), Jesus (1999), Thirteen (2003), and Waitress (2007).

Kelli Presley Fictional character in Black Christmas

Kelli Presley is a fictional character in the 2006 slasher film Black Christmas. The character, created by writer-director Glen Morgan and portrayed by actress Katie Cassidy, serves as a replacement to Jess from the original film.

<i>Gardens of the Night</i> 2008 American film

Gardens of the Night is a 2008 American drama film, written and directed by Damian Harris and starring Gillian Jacobs, John Malkovich, Ryan Simpkins, and Tom Arnold.

<i>Mothers Day</i> (2010 film) 2010 film by Darren Lynn Bousman

Mother's Day is a 2010 American psychological horror film directed by Darren Lynn Bousman. It is a loose remake of Charles Kaufman's Mother's Day and was written by Scott Milam and produced by Brett Ratner.

<i>The Resident</i> (film) 2011 film by Antti Jokinen

The Resident is a 2011 British thriller film directed by Antti Jokinen and starring Hilary Swank and Jeffrey Dean Morgan. Swank stars as a recently single woman who rents an apartment in New York City and comes to suspect that someone is stalking her. The film also features a cameo from Hammer Films star Christopher Lee, in his first collaboration with the studio since 1976's To the Devil a Daughter and his last before his death in 2015.

<i>Edge of the Axe</i> 1988 Spanish slasher film

Edge of the Axe is a 1988 English language Spanish slasher film directed by José Ramón Larraz, and starring Barton Faulks, Christina Marie Lane, Page Moseley, and Fred Holliday. The film centers on a masked maniac murdering people in a rural mountain town in Northern California.

<i>August Underground</i> 2001 American exploitation horror film directed by Fred Vogel

August Underground is a 2001 American exploitation horror film directed by Fred Vogel, and written by Vogel and Allen Peters. The film stars Vogel as a serial killer named Peter, who kidnaps and kills several innocent people, while his unnamed accomplice, played by Peters, films and documents the murders.

<i>Sinister</i> (film) 2012 film by Scott Derrickson

Sinister is a 2012 supernatural horror film directed by Scott Derrickson and written by C. Robert Cargill and Derrickson. It shows Ethan Hawke as a struggling true-crime writer whose discovery of snuff films depicting gruesome murders in his new house puts his family in danger. Juliet Rylance, Fred Thompson, James Ransone, Clare Foley, and Michael Hall D'Addario appear in supporting roles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tug O'Neale</span> Soap opera character

Peter "Tug" O'Neale is a fictional character from the Australian Channel Seven soap opera Home and Away, played by Tristan Bancks. The actor was selected from 200 people who had auditioned for the role and was contracted to appear for one month. Bancks soon joined the regular cast and Tug became a prominent character. Tug fills the role of the villain and is characterised by his "hardened, streetwise tough kid" image. The serial created a backstory consisting of a mother who abandoned him and an alcoholic father. Bancks has credited Tug's troubled childhood as the reason viewers were able to relate to him.

<i>Open Windows</i> (film) 2014 film

Open Windows is a 2014 found footage techno-thriller film directed and written by Nacho Vigalondo. The film stars Elijah Wood, Sasha Grey and Neil Maskell, and had its world premiere at South by Southwest on 10 March 2014. It is Vigalondo's first English-language film.

<i>Creep</i> (2014 film) 2014 film by Patrick Brice

Creep is a 2014 American found footage psychological horror film directed by Patrick Brice, his directorial debut, from a story by Brice and Mark Duplass, who both star in the film. Filmed as found footage, Brice portrays a videographer assigned to record an eccentric client, played by Duplass. Creep was inspired by Brice's experiences on Craigslist and the movies My Dinner with Andre, Misery, and Fatal Attraction. Brice and Duplass refined the film's story during filming, which resulted in multiple versions of each scene and several alternate end scenarios.

<i>Hello, My Name Is Doris</i> 2015 film by Michael Showalter

Hello, My Name Is Doris is a 2015 American coming-of-age romantic comedy-drama film directed by Michael Showalter from a screenplay by Laura Terruso and Showalter, about a woman in her 60s who tries to act on her attraction to a younger co-worker. It stars Sally Field in the title role, alongside Max Greenfield, Beth Behrs, Wendi McLendon-Covey, Stephen Root, Elizabeth Reaser, Natasha Lyonne and Tyne Daly.

<i>Burying the Ex</i> 2014 film by Joe Dante

Burying the Ex is a 2014 American zombie comedy film directed by Joe Dante and written by Alan Trezza, starring Anton Yelchin, Ashley Greene, Alexandra Daddario and Oliver Cooper. It screened out of competition at the 71st Venice International Film Festival, and was released on June 19, 2015, by Image Entertainment.

<i>Pod</i> (film) 2015 American film

Pod is a 2015 American horror film written and directed by Mickey Keating. It stars Lauren Ashley Carter, Dean Cates, Brian Morvant, Larry Fessenden, and John Weselcouch. Carter and Cates play siblings who stage an intervention for their unstable brother, played by Morvant. As the situation spirals out of control, they begin to wonder if what they had dismissed as their brother's paranoid delusions may be true. Writing was influenced by The Twilight Zone and classic horror films of the 1970s, including the 1978 version of Invasion of the Body Snatchers, which inspired the title. Shooting took place in Maine in winter 2014. It premiered at South by Southwest on March 16, 2015, and was released theatrically on August 28, 2015. Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a 67% approval rating based on six reviews.

<i>Keep Watching</i> 2017 American film

Keep Watching is a 2017 American horror thriller film directed by Sean Carter and written by Joseph Dembner. It was produced by Nicolas Chartier, Andrew Rona, Alex Heineman, Craig J. Flores, Michael Fiore, and Joseph Dembner. It stars Bella Thorne, Ioan Gruffudd, Natalie Martinez, Chandler Riggs, Leigh Whannell, Matthew Willig and Christopher James Baker.

<i>The Good Neighbor</i> (film) 2016 American film

The Good Neighbor is a 2016 American psychological horror film directed by Kasra Farahani and written by Mark Bianculli and Jeff Richard. The film stars James Caan, Logan Miller and Keir Gilchrist. The film was released on September 16, 2016, by Vertical Entertainment.

<i>Insidious: The Last Key</i> 2018 film by Adam Robitel

Insidious: The Last Key is a 2018 American supernatural horror film directed by Adam Robitel and written by Leigh Whannell. It is produced by Jason Blum, Oren Peli, and James Wan. It is the fourth installment in the Insidious franchise, and the second in the chronology of the story running through the series. Starring Lin Shaye, Angus Sampson, Whannell, Spencer Locke, Caitlin Gerard, and Bruce Davison, the film follows parapsychologist Elise Rainier as she investigates a haunting in her childhood home.

<i>Evil Dead Rise</i> 2023 American film by Lee Cronin

Evil Dead Rise is a 2023 American supernatural horror film written and directed by Lee Cronin. It is a standalone entry and the fifth installment in the Evil Dead film series. The film stars Lily Sullivan and Alyssa Sutherland as two estranged sisters trying to survive and save their family from deadites. Morgan Davies, Gabrielle Echols, and Nell Fisher appear in supporting roles.

<i>Soft & Quiet</i> American horror film

Soft & Quiet is a 2022 American horror thriller film written, produced and directed by Beth de Araújo in her directorial debut. It stars Stefanie Estes and Olivia Luccardi. Jason Blum serves as an executive producer under his Blumhouse Productions banner.

References

  1. Nemiroff, Perri (March 2, 2015). "HANGMAN Trailer: Experience Home Invasion 2.0 at SXSW". Collider.
  2. Disgusting, Mr (January 11, 2016). "'Hangman,' Starring Amy Smart and Jeremy Sisto, Swings to Home Video". Bloody-Disgusting.com. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  3. Wixson, Heather (March 22, 2015). "SXSW 2015 Exclusive: Jeremy Sisto on His Home Invasion Thriller 'Hangman'". Daily Dead. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  4. Nemiroff, Perri (March 2, 2015). "HANGMAN Trailer: Experience Home Invasion 2.0 at SXSW". Collider.
  5. Hipes, Patrick (September 8, 2015). "Myriad Pictures To Launch Genre Label With 'Hangman' Sales Deal". Deadline.com. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  6. Squires, John (January 11, 2016). "Alchemy Planning February 2016 Release for Found Footage Film Hangman". DreadCentral.com. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  7. https://giallodiscorecords.bandcamp.com/album/my-moon
  8. Scheck, Frank (April 1, 2015). "'Hangman': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter .
  9. Harvey, Dennis (March 19, 2015). "SXSW Film Review: 'Hangman'". Variety .
  10. Cooper, Patrcik (April 6, 2015). "[Review] Home Invasion Thriller 'Hangman' Underwhelms". Bloody Disgusting . Retrieved July 27, 2015.
  11. Suzanne-Mayer, Dominick (March 19, 2015). "SXSW Film Review: Hangman". Consequence of Sound . Retrieved July 27, 2015.