Wild Swimmers review – rickety low-budget horror finds something to worry about in the water
2026-03-17 - 11:20
In Ric Rawlins’ West Country vampire film, a student journalist investigates mysteries below the surface of River Avon What lurks beneath the surface can be dangerous, as any wild swimmer will tell you. There really is something in the water to worry about. But Wild Swimmers is not a documentary campaigning for clean water; the menace here is not E coli but a centuries-old river-dwelling vampire. It’s written and directed by music journalist turned film-maker Ric Rawlins and, like his 2023 debut Rewilding, it is another shoestring outsider horror set in the West Country, amateurishly acted by non-professionals and rickety in way you will either find charming or a chore. Valerie Kwok is Deji, a journalism student from Hong Kong who is looking into a spate of mysterious deaths in the River Avon. She tracks down a retired police officer who investigated the death of a teenage girl in 2018 that was officially recorded as a drowning. But something felt off, the copper tells Deji: a witness described the girl seemingly pulled under the water, and the postmortem identified snake bites on her neck. The plot only gets sillier as the body count rises, and Deji is joined in her search for the truth by photographer Kim (Caroline Murray). Continue reading...