Dead End is the embodiment of the old saying “road to nowhere.” In this 2003 horror movie, one unlucky family’s annual trip to grandma’s house doesn’t go according to plan. What awaits these unsuspecting characters is a series of events that will steer them straight into the unknown. It’s one hell of a Christmas in this macabre holiday tale, which stirs up uncertainty and unrest as the pavement stretches on forever.
Dead End first showed up on video-store shelves around 2004 after enjoying great success at multiple film festivals. Made on a low budget of less than a million dollars and with a small cast of actors, this California-shot yet French-financed horror-comedy has, strangely enough, yet to be reissued on a physical media format higher than DVD. Nevertheless, it remains a cult favorite all these years later. The colorful dialogue, the progressively unnerving atmosphere, and the ensemble of quirky characters each play an important part in why this dark Christmas outing is worth revisiting every December.
Dead End is a high-concept movie regardless of its avowedly simple setup. The trouble here begins with Ray Wise’s character Frank, the head of the Harrington Family, doing the unexpected: deviating from the customary, not to mention uneventful route to his mother-in-law’s for Christmas. He took a backroad in hopes that the change of scenery would keep him awake at the wheel. Well, he was wrong. As Frank brings the car to a screeching halt after nodding off, the other passengers all awaken to find themselves alone on an empty road. Not another car or person in sight. The movie is already off to an uninspired start, but, to use another hackneyed phrase: good things come to those who wait.
Fans will often praise Dead End with one major reservation; to be more specific, they bring up the movie’s stock of clichés. A road trip fraught with peril, the creepy stopovers, and, most of all, a conclusion that was too commonly used in 2000s horror. Funnily enough, co-directors and co-screenwriters Jean-Baptiste Andrea and Fabrice Canepa were deliberate with how their directorial debut would come across to more experienced viewers. The two French filmmakers were always one step ahead of their own movie. In that sense, they played on familiar tropes almost immediately upon use without also succumbing to sheer parody. So the story, in a way, is both predictable and unpredictable at the same time.
Other horror movies where unfortunate fates are determined by one wrong turn would eventually bring the characters to a physical location of sorts. A cabin in the woods, a haunted house, a terrifying tourist trap — anything tangible and with an address. Meanwhile, this movie pulls a total Twilight Zone and asks what would happen if the car just kept moving in vain. The dissatisfaction of an incomplete journey is multiplied a hundred times over as Frank and his family drive onwards with no real assurance that they’ll ever reach a proper stopping point. To make this trip worse, there is a supernatural element that’s preying on the characters. A black hearse à la Phantasm is snatching them up one by one. It’s all quite obvious what is happening here, although for the sake of suspense, the Harringtons are largely clueless.
Dead End wouldn’t be anywhere as effective without its cast. Everyone is memorable all thanks to rich characterization and a handful of nasty set-pieces to remember them by. The Harringtons are, at least to someone looking in from the outside, a typical family performing a basic tradition. They still seem normal enough even after witnessing the mild discord during the movie’s outset. Once their façade and routine each start to erode, though, the extent of the Harringtons’ troubles becomes unmistakable. This one American family’s disintegration channels Twin Peaks — an apt comparison especially with Wise cast as yet another increasingly unstable patriarch — however, the execution here is more straightforward and immediate.
There is rarely a moment in this movie where a character isn’t carrying on, either because of their inherent personality or because that’s their natural response to stress. Mick Cain’s role as the exasperating young son and little brother falls in the former category, seeing as he’s a snarky nuisance from the get-go. In time, horror icon Lin Shaye briefly but outstandingly seizes the spotlight. She, a mother pushed far past her limit, trades indignation for insanity. Laura’s wild and trauma-induced antics include shooting her husband in the leg and, most unforgettably, rubbing her exposed brain to the point of orgasm.
Wise and Alexandra Holden are the movie’s emotional anchors. To everyone’s surprise, crabby Frank becomes more and more poignant as he teeters between madness and rationality — Wise’s sharp performance as a fallible father and husband shouldn’t go unnoticed here — whereas Holden’s character of Marion was clearly designed to be the most compassionate (as well as sympathetic) of the whole lot. Marion’s default role of family mediator is encumbered by a guilty conscience that only grows over the loss of her clingy boyfriend Brad (Billy Asher) and other loved ones. From there she then has to try, albeit unsuccessfully, to keep this broken family together.
Other horror movies set at Christmas have a tendency to juxtapose the beautiful sights and sounds of the holidays with aspects of the genre. That high contrast isn’t available in Dead End, which never has the expectations of the season ruined by a malevolent force. The characters don’t even start out as happy. More realistically, the Harringtons are celebrating Christmas together out of mere obligation than the pure desire to be with each other. Everyone is miserable long before this dreadful road comes into view. It’s easy to think of this movie as a lighter helping of Christmas horror, due in large part to its heavy streak of humor. Yet Dead End is easily one of the most depressing movies of its kind.
As previously mentioned, many fans take issue with the story’s conclusion. The Harrington party turning out to be dead or on death’s door all this time is deemed unimaginative. Although, the difference between this movie and The Sixth Sense is Dead End isn’t trying to trick anyone. The script even drops substantial clues along the way to make the outcome less of a shocker. The ending, which comes out of nowhere for no one other than the characters, will urge viewers to deduct points from the overall score, but this is a movie where the journey is far more important than the destination.
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