Film Snail

Chemical Peel
Chemical Peel

5.1

Chemical Peel

R·2014·95m

Summary

A weekend trip to the woods for a bachelorette party turns deadly when a nearby train accident causes a chemical reaction that overtakes the secluded valley. But waiting out the disaster inside could prove to be just as dangerous as being outdoors.

Crew

Director, Screenplay

Hank Braxtan

Screenplay

Arielle Brachfeld

Screenplay

Dan Sinclair

Reviews

Wuchak

Wuchak

November 25, 2024

6

**_Six women in a cabin-in-the-woods of SoCal and… something toxic_**

"Chemical Peel" (2014) only cost $20,000, but it’s so proficiently made it doesn’t feel like a micro-budget Indie. It comes in the tradition of “Carriers” from five years earlier with the main difference being that this is a ‘confined location’ flick. In other words, the bulk of the runtime involves the house-in-the-sticks and the dramatics of the females.

Speaking of which, blonde Natalie Victoria stands out on the beauty front as protagonist Rae. Meanwhile statuesque redhead Arielle Brachfeld is a real biyatch as Angela, but it happens. Leigh Davis is also worth a mention as Kimberly. Too bad the director didn’t know how to shoot women.

At about the 18-minute mark the situation takes a life-or-death turn and the story becomes very compelling. It morphs into a body horror flick and is hampered by the one-dimensional location, but it’s worth checking out for those interested.

It runs about 1 hour, 35 minutes, and was shot in the Greater Los Angeles area at Glendale, Ojai, Semi Valley and Hollywood.

GRADE: B-

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$20,000.00

Revenue:

$0.00

Keywords

survival
bachelorette party
chemical leak
eco-horror