Slipshod Horror Mishmash On the 3rd Day Doesn’t Have a Prayer

Daniel de la Vega’s On the 3rd Day is a slipshod tangle of horror subgenres that prays with clasped hands for something to stick. Writers Alberto Fasce and Gonzalo Ventura take a simplistic inciting incident and overcomplicate a narrative structure with flashbacks, split perspective storytelling and an incessant desire to keep shifting gears. Theological influences abound given the film’s title—a reference to Jesus’ resurrection—and yet it’s hardly taut religious pandemonium. On the 3rd Day never coheres, it’s just Halloween Mad Libs trying to fake its way through an actual start-to-finish storyline.
Cecilia Amato (Mariana Anghileri) has chosen to flee her abusive ex with her son Martin (Octavio Belmonte). She drives towards salvation, but tragedy strikes when Cecilia collides with Padre Enrique (Gerardo Romano): Something escapes from his truck’s now-busted trunk. Cecilia awakens in the hospital three days later with no memory of the accident’s aftermath, yet must locate her missing child. Martin is somewhere out there, and so is whatever Enrique was transporting as a messenger of God.
The first source of frustration related to On the 3rd Day isn’t even script related, it’s spoken words. Unfortunately, the screener for critics only offers dubbed audio and no subtitles. So this review considers the atrocious ADR voice acting that miscalculates tone, energy and vocal realism. At best, dubbed audio doesn’t harm the watching experience—here, it’s an inescapable distraction. Elderly characters are given cartoonish tenors that enunciate out of tempo with their moving mouths. A lack of enthusiasm sets a precedent like voice actors are stuffily reading off a teleprompter with no preparation, yanking us out of key moments. That’s a significant strike-one stumble out of the gate.