The idea behind the Richard Anthony Dunford (P.O.V) written and directed British sci-fi horror Good Neighbours felt so familiar that at first I thought that it was something I had seen before. I later realised it wasn't, instead this follows a very similar plot to 2023 sci-fi horror The Hive. That one was set in America and had a better budget, but if someone were to say this was set in the same film universe I wouldn't bat an eyelid. Both films have obviously be inspired by the classic Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
Tamesha (L.A Rodgers) and her husband Luke (Karl Kennedy-Williams - P.O.V) live in a small village with their young son Dominic (Param Patel). Noticing that new neighbours have moved into the next door property, Tamesha pays them a visit to say hello. Joseph (Judson Vaughan - The Cellar, The Spiritualist, P.O.V) and Mary (Dani Thompson - Devil in the Woods, Harvest of the Night: Halloween Night) are the new neighbours are show themselves to be very odd, with strange mannerisms and a tendency to take everything literally. Despite the weirdness, Tamesha decides to invite them for dinner the following day. It is here the odd couple show their real intentions, plunging the family into an evening of horror.
So, this was very similar in feel to The Hive, the closest contrast being the weird behaviour of the two new neighbours. They speak with a clipped tone, and their reactions are often unexpected. One example has Tamesha telling them to 'take a seat', with them promptly complying by grabbing a cushion each. I really enjoyed Vaughan's role in particular, I liked how the character is both shown as comedic and deadly serious, able to switch on a dime. Rodgers and Kennedy-Williams also stood out as good protagonists, I liked the banter they had between themselves. Elsewhere, it was fun to spot in the end credits that Jamie Langlands (The Cellar, C.A.M) had a minor role here as a man wearing a hoodie, who due to having the hood up was unrecognisable to me.
The first forty five minutes were the lead up to the realisation from Tamesha and Luke as to who the neighbours really were. The tone of the film flips on a dime, going from an awkward comedic dinner party to a sci-fi horror that takes itself very seriously within moments, making for an intense scene. There are lots of comedy moments, especially early on, but these are contrasted against scenes set elsewhere that never really felt like they fitted in with the larger story well. This includes a suspenseful prologue that sees a young woman being followed back to her apartment by hooded men, and a later bit more silly scene of a woman and her friend out in woodland. There were attempts to tie these scenes to the main plot, but I don't think it was that successful, as they felt a bit random.
Special effects are minimal and are one area where the low budget of this indie horror is displayed. This includes a knife slash that results in no blood or apparent injury despite the victim reacting as if they had been hurt, and some people in 'pods' of a type who seemed to be covered in green and slimy looking silly string. Sometimes the effects were decent enough, such as a wound Joseph gets on his cheek around the halfway mark. I would probably say that the most consistently good part of Good Neighbours was the soundtrack, I really enjoyed its sound, particularly during later more horror-like scenes. The story was simple but I found it effective, and appreciated the little ending twist, that while not surprising, was executed well.
Good Neighbours was an enjoyable sci-fi horror that had some good casting choices. The effects may have been at times not amazing, and it may have struggled to neatly combine its various little subplots, but overall I liked the film, and found myself getting into it. Good Neighbours can be viewed on Amazon Prime, both in the U.S (here) and the U.K (here), thanks to Hypericum Films.
SCORE: