Pencil Face

2008
6.4| 0h3m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 15 May 2008 Released
Producted By: Dandy Dwarves
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

A young girl is playing on some waste ground when she finds a pencil with a face. Whatever she draws with the pencil becomes real. Just an ordinary day.

Genre

Fantasy, Horror

Watch Online

Pencil Face (2008) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Director

Christian Simmons

Production Companies

Dandy Dwarves

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
Pencil Face Videos and Images
  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew

Pencil Face Audience Reviews

GrimPrecise I'll tell you why so serious
Connianatu How wonderful it is to see this fine actress carry a film and carry it so beautifully.
BeSummers Funny, strange, confrontational and subversive, this is one of the most interesting experiences you'll have at the cinema this year.
KnotStronger This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.
Foreverisacastironmess A bored girl bumps into a giant living pencil with a face one sunny day and for a while she has a great time with it, drawing doodles of a cake and a kite that conjures the objects straight from her imagination into solid form and makes them appear out of thin air, but as it's revealed the powers of the pencil thing can be both a wonder and a weapon as she decides she wants a lollipop and draws a swirl that pops into existence as a cone-shaped black vortex that seems to draw her in, and she approaches it and it sucked into oblivion... This is a cool short for what it is, very different indeed! Rather than oppressive, I found the mood kind of light and breezy and carefree, with something sinister hovering at the edges that further comes into focus as the events of the short proceed. It's ethereal and beautifully shot, everything's so bright and lucid, it almost feels like a magical fairy kingdom type head trip, hardly like something horror-related at all, except that it does have a certain air of spookiness about it and I think I know why... Oh yeah, I know, it's gotta be the pencil, I mean it's bloody-well terrifying! You can't not look at it or ignore it no matter how hard you try. The hideous thing looks like a cartoon character that's become tangible somehow. It's always smiling with a creepy fixed expression that it never changes except for a tiny bit at the beginning when it moves its eyes as it notices the girl. It alone brings the horror element of this short if you asked me, if nothing else due to how unsettling its design is, that along with what befalls the poor girl! It simply *has* to mean something, but what? Well I think it could be an elaborate drugs abuse metaphor, but if you take it literally, the pencil is like a tempter, an evil genie who gives her a few nice harmless 'wishes' and then tricks her into drawing the method of her own demise, because as you see the pencil plants the images of what she draws into her mind a moment before she sketches them. Does it now have her soul? Is she now fresh lead for the 'magic' that will entrap further victims? I don't know but it sure leaves things with a spooky feeling. I love the effect of the rough drawings becoming real, it's pretty excellently done and is a very imaginative idea. It's a short that feels like it's half magical and half scary, and the two come together to make up a short that's quite unlike any that you've likely to have seen before. Do try to have fun with it, it's weird and kinda fun, silly and sinister, like the Killer Klowns From Outer Space.. And that's a damn good crazy old comic horror movie, and my head is tired so I'ma have to say so long.. You may never look at a pencil the same way again. Hell, they won't look at you the same either! ;D
bob the moo A young girl is playing on some waste ground when she finds a pencil with a face. Whatever she draws with the pencil becomes real. Just an ordinary day.The word you're looking for is "unsettling". This is the word that the film aims squarely at and it is a state that it more or less achieves. The story is a simple one and, although the specific details remain to be seen, we know that this will end badly for the girl. We know this because the film very much plays to the genre of b-movie horror such as Chucky or the like. The face on the pencil is frozen into a permanent grin and has the sort of look on its face that to a child may not bother them, but to an adult it only looks creepy and wrong. This is played out under a score which only suggests creepiness and horror; OK it repeats too much for too long as a score, but it works for this.So the film works well as a reference to b-grade horrors because it gets the aesthetics mostly right and it is shot with a detached emptiness which could almost be a fashion shoot because Logan Link looks very much a model with her slightly awkward look and long thin frame (edit: just after posting this I decided to Google and yes, Link is indeed a model). The film doesn't really do much beyond this odd creeping horror feel. Others have tried to make the film be a comment on pedophiles or related topics, but this is a stretch and one the film itself never makes. Enjoy it for what it does well and it is good enough to carry the short run time even if it does have some flaws with repetition and lack of a slightly stronger ending.
autul Most horrors and thrillers nowadays are just full-blown 'cliches' with both - predictable plot and what I call 'atmosphere spoilers'. Actually very few have something to spoil in the first place. Exceptions are really hard to find.I would divide their weaknesses into 3 groups: 1. Constrained humorous (?) dialogs in the least appropriate moments. 2. Predictable. 3. (The most important) Lacking the ability to mirror even a fraction of basic human behaviors in the face of death. Or worse fear for that matter... (related to point 1). Three people are facing dangerous creature in the forest/basements. What is usually their brilliant idea? Oh, yes - 'Let's split.' A character being hunted by something is walking alone in the dark... backwards. A man facing a despicable horror is not stunned nor paralyzed a bit and he is able to freely say 'Oh, s*' with an expression more appropriate for crying after a failed exam. On top of that a music track more appropriate for Benny Hill chase scene. You get the idea. Now, Pencil Face can't be an example of all of the above not happening because there's simply no darkness (per se) and no dumb teenagers. But it represents a certain BRAND of movies. A BRAND that you feel wouldn't allow any of the above happen if it had been a cinematic movie. A brand that guarantees an atmospheric, unreal and intelligent experience. If you ever see a movie poster with a 'From the creators of Pencil Face' and the ticket price is $50 don't hesitate - go see it!Of course the brand itself it's not enough. Coming up with a story like that required a great deal of imagination for sure. Maybe even a slightly distorted but brilliant mind, who knows :) When I was watching it I had a feeling that I see someone's dream. That is strengthen by a certain... Just don't miss it and it might be that this short film will be a start of your search for a completely new...something.
jfgibson73 Pencil Face is a little over three minutes long. In it, a young girl is playing outside and encounters a giant pencil with a face. No words are spoken; somehow, the girl intuits how to use the magic pencil. She picks it up to draw an outline of a cake, which then becomes real. She doesn't actually draw on anything. She just picks the pencil up and lines appear in the air. She then draws a kite, which also becomes real and we see her play with it for a moment. A repetitive musical cue plays over and over, creating a foreboding atmosphere. The camera lingers on the strange, smiling face of the giant pencil. You get the feeling something is going to go wrong. For her third attempt, the girl tries to draw a giant lollipop. However, what appears looks like a giant black funnel. It makes an odd noise, like the head of a timpani drum. She steps towards it, and is sucked in. The last thing we see is the smiling face of the pencil. I'm not sure if the filmmakers did this more as exercise to practice using special effects, or if they just wanted to make something weird and unusual. Some people will probably carry the image of that distorted pencil smile long after watching. It might be more appropriately be categorized as horror, rather than drama.