HOKUM:
ONE SCARY-ASS STAY AT A HOTEL!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: **** out of 4
NEON
Adam Scott in Hokum
Adam Scott (Parks and Recreation, Severance, The Monkey) visits the Hotel from Hell in Hokum, the new horror film from Neon and director Damian McCarthy (Caveat, Oddity) in his third feature directing effort. I gotta say, the trailer for this certainly got my attention for no other reason than the design of the film’s monster, which gave me serious Insidious vibes with an arthouse bite.
I’ll be honest, I’m not familiar with McCarthy’s work, and after seeing this, I might need to seek out his other films because Holy shit, Hokum is wild and genuinely scary! This is a freaky fucking movie with very effective scares and spine-tingling suspense while also having an engaging story and solid character development.
The film follows Ohm Bauman (Scott), an author struggling to write the epilogue in a successful trilogy of books, who travels to Ireland to scatter his parents’ ashes. He stays at a seemingly normal hotel only to find out about a haunted Honeymoon Suite that’s supposedly home to a terrifying witch…oh, and the hotel’s bartender has mysteriously gone missing.
The film also stars Peter Coonan (King of the Travellers, Love/Hate, Peaky Blinders) as Mal and David Wilmont (The Devil’s Own, Black Sails, Hamnet) as Jerry.
Overall, Hokum probably doesn’t dethrone The Shining as the King of Hotel Horror Movies, but goddamn, is this creepy? It’s a slow-burn with the main character trapped in one location for a large portion of the film and scares that range from atmospheric and subtle to booming jump scares and absolute mindfuck imagery that may or may not be real, and all of it works spectacularly.
This is definitely not a Conjuring-like movie with constant jump scares and creeps throughout; Hokum really takes its time to build its scares up while also using its setup as a character piece for Adam Scott’s Ohm. One very challenging thing, not just with horror but any genre of film, is having a main character who’s a complete and total asshole and making the audience care about and be invested in them; that’s what this movie does with Adam Scott’s character.
If this were any other horror movie, Ohm would be a douchebag character who you just want to see get killed or have something terrible happen to him, but what’s so clever about Hokum is that he’s portrayed as an extremely flawed individual, and the film uses this new environment and situation he’s in to hopefully fix him by the end. At the flip of a dime, I went from “Fuck Ohm Bauman!” to “Oh My God, what’s gonna happen to him? Get out!” as I was watching this film, and all of it comes from the script, McCarthy’s direction, and most importantly, Scott’s performance.
Adam Scott is great here as this flawed, bitter author who clearly has serious psychological issues and struggles with finishing his last book. Scott plays a jerk character remarkably well, and it’s crazy seeing him do things that would probably get him in trouble with the law. As mentioned before, he’s not a jerk for the sake of being a jerk; his character has layers and depth, and throughout his nightmarish experience in the Honeymoon Suite, he learns to be a better person and conquer his demons in more ways than one.
Damian McCarthy’s direction is also incredible as he makes this old hotel building a legitimately scary-looking place even before all the supernatural and witchcraft stuff happens. Just this dark, brown hotel with muted colors and dim lighting to craft this unsettling and creepy atmosphere, if I stayed in a hotel like this, I would have requested a refund and stayed somewhere else, even if there wasn’t an evil witch downstairs in the basement.
His scares, accompanied by Joseph Bishara of The Conjuring and Insidious fame’s musical score, are shocking and get under your skin. I’m serious, I have not felt this way watching a horror movie since probably Hereditary back in 2018; these are pitch-perfect scares of varying qualities.
Hokum is a stellar and absolutely terrifying horror movie that leaves you on the edge of your seat and gets your blood pumping with every creepy moment. Add an amazing Adam Scott performance and downright brilliant storytelling, and you've got a spooky movie that will be talked about for eons. I would gladly suggest booking your stay as soon as possible.

















































































































































































































































































































