The new micro-budget indie movie Falling Stars is billed as folk horror, and the premise makes it clear why: Itâs a story about three brothers who take a trip into the desert to disinter a witchâs corpse, and end up unleashing something frightening. But the film â produced, directed, written, edited, and shot by Richard Karpala and Gabriel Bienczycki â taps into a very different species of spookiness than you might expect from that description.
Falling Stars feels more like a UFO or alien-abduction story. The movie doesnât deal in the creepiness of the dark woods, the muddy hamlet, or the haunted manor: Instead, it taps into a wide-eyed fear of the open sky at night. While watching it, I was often reminded of another low-budget production from a few years ago, Andrew Pattersonâs excellent 1950s-style UFO throwback The Vast of Night. Thatâs a much better-made movie than this one, but Karpala and Bienczycki have found such a unique blend of genre flavors in Falling Stars â witchy folklore with starlit, they-came-from-above terror â that itâs worth checking outâŠ