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Hallowed Ground (2007)

Posted on October 4, 2025 By admin No Comments on Hallowed Ground (2007)
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Ah yes, Hallowed Ground. A Sci-Fi Channel (before they rebranded to “Syfy” because bad spelling = edgy) original movie about demonic scarecrows, backwoods cults, and Nick Chinlund doing his best “Satan’s youth pastor” impression. The film’s tagline should’ve just been: “If you thought cornfields were boring before, wait until we prove they’re still boring, but now with bad CGI birds.”


The Plot: Wicker Man, but With Discount Overalls

The story follows Liz (Jaimie Alexander, bless her, stuck in this mess before she could graduate to Thor), who stumbles into a creepy little town named Hope. Note: if your horror movie takes place in a town with an “ironic” name like Hope, Liberty, or Friendship, you already know the place has a 150% chance of being filled with cannibals, cultists, or both. Here, we get cultists plus an undead scarecrow with the agility of a yoga instructor and the personality of a salad.

The founding preacher, Jonas Hathaway, was nailed to a cross a century ago for human sacrifice, but wouldn’t you know it—he’s due for a comeback tour. His followers decide Liz is the perfect “chosen one” to carry his seed. Because what every woman really wants is to be impregnated by a sweaty Nick Chinlund cosplayer while corn rustles in the background.

From there, the movie just sort of lurches around like the undead preacher it’s obsessed with. Characters die, scarecrows shuffle around, and crows attack people like a bootleg Birdemic. By the time you reach the finale, you’re rooting for the birds, the scarecrow, or even the vines to win—literally anything other than another 20 minutes of Liz running through corn.


The Scarecrow: Spirit Halloween Comes Alive

Let’s talk about the killer scarecrow. Supposedly a terrifying monster risen from the grave. In execution? Imagine a Spirit Halloween animatronic that broke down, got shipped back, then re-sold on clearance.

The scarecrow lumbers around stiffly, making you wonder how it managed to take down anyone other than, maybe, a narcoleptic pigeon. It has the face of a papier-mâché project gone horribly wrong and the dexterity of your drunk uncle at Thanksgiving. Watching it stalk victims is less “terrifying” and more “waiting for your dial-up internet to connect in 1998.”


The Cult: PTA Moms Gone Wild

The townspeople of Hope are apparently in on this whole “rebirth of the preacher” thing, but instead of being menacing, they feel like the worst PTA meeting you’ve ever attended. They whisper about prophecies, nail people to crosses, and nod along while the preacher rants like a cornfield Alex Jones.

Their plan? Get Liz pregnant so the preacher’s spirit can live again. Because nothing says “terrifying horror film” like a plotline that reads like it was pulled from an abstinence-only education pamphlet.


The Sheriff: Officer Useless Reporting for Duty

Sheriff O’Connor (Brian McNamara) is supposed to be the competent, protective lawman. Instead, he spends most of the movie either unconscious or possessed. Honestly, the guy spends less time awake than a cat. When he finally reveals he’s been body-snatched by the evil preacher, it’s less shocking twist and more: “Oh cool, so now he has an excuse for being bad at his job.”


The Child Sidekick: Chloe Grace Moretz, Future Star, Current Prop

Chloë Grace Moretz shows up as Sabrina, a traumatized little girl hiding in the cornfields after her parents were killed. She does her best, but mostly she’s here to be “the innocent child” trope and remind you that child actors should unionize for hazard pay. She’s a plot coupon more than a character—used to create sympathy and eventually light the farmhouse on fire like a pyromaniac Girl Scout.


The Birds: Discount Hitchcock

Oh, the birds. In theory, they’re meant to symbolize the preacher’s resurrection and serve as omens of doom. In practice, they’re a bad CGI screensaver attacking actors who are clearly swatting at tennis balls off-camera.

At one point, the townspeople cheer because they think the birds are “a good omen,” only for the crows to immediately rip them to shreds. Honestly? Highlight of the movie. Finally, the film acknowledges what we’ve all been thinking: every single character deserves to be eaten alive.


The Horror: More Corn than Scorn

Good horror builds suspense. Great horror makes you dread the next scene. Hallowed Ground makes you dread the runtime. Every “scare” is telegraphed by cliché:

  • Loud noises in the cornfield? Must be the scarecrow.

  • Phone lines dead? Of course.

  • The creepy preacher staring way too long at Liz’s “purity”? Gross, but not surprising.

At no point do you feel scared. At most, you feel like you’re watching someone else play a bad horror video game while you wait your turn.


The Ending: Hope You Don’t Care

The climax involves vines grabbing Liz (yes, the movie really said, “What if Evil Dead but less fun?”), Sabrina setting fires, and the preacher being reborn only to immediately get dive-bombed by crows. Liz and Sabrina then hitch a ride out of town with a trucker, who turns on the radio to remind them (and us) of their ordeal. Because nothing says “cinematic closure” like FM radio.

It’s a limp finish to a limp story, like a balloon deflating at a funeral.


The Acting: Talented Cast, Trapped in Corn Hell

  • Jaimie Alexander (Liz): Tries her best, but mostly looks like she’s wondering if Marvel has openings.

  • Nick Chinlund (Jonas): Plays the evil preacher like he’s auditioning for a Southern Gothic karaoke night.

  • Chloë Grace Moretz: Already showing more charisma at age 10 than the rest of the cast combined.

  • Ethan Phillips (the preacher): Watching Star Trek: Voyager’s Neelix try to lead a Satanic fertility cult is… let’s call it “miscast.”


Final Thoughts: Cursed Cornfield of Mediocrity

Hallowed Ground isn’t scary, it isn’t fun, and it isn’t even laughably bad—it’s just corn. Endless, repetitive corn, sprinkled with cult clichés and CGI birds that look like they escaped from a Windows 95 screensaver.

This isn’t “hallowed ground.” This is “hollow ground.” A cinematic graveyard where pacing, originality, and dignity are buried six feet under.


Final Verdict: 1 Possessed Scarecrow Out of 5

  • +1 for the birds eating the cultists (finally, some justice).

  • -1 for every minute of runtime longer than 15.

  • -3 for wasting Jaimie Alexander and traumatizing us with scarecrow cosplay.

  • Net result: burn the cornfield, salt the earth, and never speak of this film again.


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