Ted's Salmagundi
A Palatable Potpourri of Posts by Ted Salmon テッド
Saturday, 28 March 2026
Trap House (2025)
Friday, 27 March 2026
Hallow Road (2025): A Masterclass in High-Stakes Claustrophobia
Just as an experiment, I got Gemini to turn my review into a "Blog Post or IMDb Review". Here's what she did with it...
Hallow Road: A Masterclass in High-Stakes Claustrophobia
Rating: ★★★★☆
Directed by Babak Anvari (Under the Shadow), Hallow Road is a taut, 80-minute psychological thriller that skirts the edges of folk horror. Taking place almost entirely within the confines of a car, the film joins the ranks of "single-location" gems like Locke and The Guilty, proving that you don't need a sprawling map to create immense scale—you just need a phone line and a ticking clock.
The Premise
The story ignites at 2:00 am when Maddie (Rosamund Pike) and Frank (Matthew Rhys) are jolted awake by their daughter, Alice. In a drug-fuelled panic, Alice reveals she has stolen Frank’s car and struck a young woman on a remote stretch of forest road.
What follows is a desperate 40-minute dash to the scene. Maddie, drawing on her skills as a paramedic, attempts to talk Alice through life-saving CPR over the phone. When a sickening "crack" signals a failed attempt and a broken rib, the moral compass of the family begins to spin. To protect Alice’s future and her university ambitions, the parents concoct a plan to hide the body—only for their scheme to be derailed by a mysterious, interfering couple who stumble upon the scene.
Technical Brilliance
The production is a fascinating blend of international craft. Despite being set in the South East of England, the film was shot across Ireland and Czech Republic studios. This "displaced" filming lends the woods an uncanny, slightly "off" atmosphere that perfectly complements the hints of ancient pagan worship associated with Hallow Road.
The sensory experience is elevated by two key factors:
The Score: Composed by Lorne Balfe and Peter Adams, the music is a superb mix of orchestral weight and ghostly choral sounds. It feels massive, contrasting the smallness of the car with the elemental gravity of the situation.
The Cinematography: Kit Fraser utilizes an extreme close-up style to devastating effect. By dwelling on the micro-expressions of Pike and Rhys—and at one point, a hauntingly tight shot of Maddie’s eye—the camera traps us in their internal panic. The shallow depth of field ensures the world outside is a blur, making the car an emotional pressure cooker.
The Performances
The film rests on the shoulders of its two leads. Matthew Rhys is excellent as the frantic, protective father, but it is Rosamund Pike who truly shines. Her ability to convey mounting anxiety and grief through her voice and face is totally convincing. She wrings every drop of emotion from the script, making the "trapped" nature of the family dynamics feel visceral.
Verdict
At a concise 80 minutes, Hallow Road doesn't overstay its welcome. It is a haunting exploration of the lengths parents will go to "shield" their children from the consequences of life. Whether you read the ending as a literal supernatural encounter or a psychological breakdown, it is a film that lingers long after the credits roll.
Highly recommended.
Hallow Road (2025)
Thursday, 26 March 2026
Pretty Lethal (2026)
Tuesday, 24 March 2026
Red Plague (2025)
Sunday, 22 March 2026
Motorola Edge 60 Neo - the arrival of Android 16
One of the benefits of the Neo over the Signature is a longer-lasting battery. Not that the Signature's 5,200mAh battery performs badly - it's just that it has more to do. More screen to drive, faster chipset to serve, more RAM and so on - so it's bound to have more impact on everyday use. Furthermore, the Signature's battery is a Si-C one, whereas the Edge 60 Neo's is not, thereby demonstrating very clearly to me that, even with the same mAh capacity of 5,200, the little phone is likely to do better. Si-C or not. And it does.
There are some 'core' changes which come with Android 16, baked into the system by Google which all devices running the OS will get. Notification Cooldown, for example, which prevents one's phone from making a noise and jumping around when receiving a barrage of messages! Be careful with that one as it's on by default - though to be fair you do get a warning and link to turn it off. Advanced Protection is there for anti-phishing, theft detection and spam filtering, though Moto's own Security suite has for a long time now been robust.
So why does the Edge 60 Neo hold Pole Position for me when I have so many other options to choose from? Well, physically, it's the perfect balance of size and weight for viewing, using one-handed, popping in a pocket and it's also robust with IP68/IP69/MIL-STD-810H. The P-OLED screen is bright, colourful and vibrant. It gets 5 OS Updates and 5 years of security (although there is now some question, which needs clarity, about the 5 years of security actually being 4). There's plenty of storage (for most people), loads of RAM and as far as I'm concerned a perfectly good camera setup - with "macro" too. The speakers' output is great with a decent soundstage too, the fingerprint scanner is good enough, improved over the 50 Neo and when used in tandem with face unlock and lift to wake isn't needed much of the time anyway. A nice big battery, well-performing, with Qi Charging and fast wired if needed. And to top it all off, full access to the Smart Connect system. Oh and did I mention that it has the best AoD there is, on any phone?! Take all that into account and actually, on some counts, even the flagship Signature can't beat it.
Saturday, 21 March 2026
The Scent of Green Papaya (1993)
Friday, 20 March 2026
Cure (1997)
Tuesday, 17 March 2026
Bone Lake (2025)
Sunday, 15 March 2026
Friday the 13th (1980)
Trap House (2025)
If you’ve ever wondered what it would look like if a gritty DEA thriller had a head-on collision with a Disney Channel movie or an episode o...
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Before I get to the ThinkPhone25 vs Moto Edge 50 Neo comparison, I thought I'd do the more logical bunch of thoughts, that being the Edg...
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Having had a meander away from WearOS with the CMF Watch Pro 2 recently, with pretty positive results, I thought I'd give Motorola a try...
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The obvious way to tackle this G85 review is as a three-way comparison. Firstly, with the phone it replaces, the G84 from the year before, b...









