2022, R, 77.
Directed by Rob Savage, Narrated by , Voices by , Starring Annie Hardy, Amar Chadha-Patel, Jemma Moore, Angela Enahoro.

Irksome protagonists are often a matter of taste. There are some actors that make some audience members bare their teeth, and some characters that will infuriate some watchers. However, that’s rarely deliberate. Not so in the case of the infuriating Annie, the “why won’t you just die” unwitting villainess of POV pitch-black comedy horror Dashcam.

Unlikable doesn’t even come close. A COVID-denying, loudmouthed, selfish, self-obsessed, moronic, ignorant, aggressive … honestly, the list goes on. Why her former bandmate Stretch (Chadha-Patel) allows her in his London house, turning up unannounced from the U.S. in the middle of the lockdown, is baffling, most especially to his partner, Gemma (Moore), who wants this slovenly, foul-mouthed imbecile ejected as fast as humanly possible.

The audience will share that emotion as Annie staggers through a series of mean-spirited petty crimes that she thinks are reasonable because she feels … slighted? Unheard? Set against by your stupid rules? That she does this in what seems to be the first stages of a Resident Evil-esque zombie apocalypse don’t improve her case. She blunders around, livestreaming her antics (although why anyone would follow her, unless they were equally annoying … oh, right).

After his game-changing Zoom horror Host (arguably the first masterpiece of the oft-damned subgenre), director Rob Savage swaps his debut’s mosaic-balancing intricacies for a much more traditional POV format. If anything, Dashcam feels like an installment from the V/H/S franchise blown up to feature length. What makes it especially testing is the presence of Annie Hardy of L.A. art rock insult comics Giant Drag. She plays a version of herself – or at least, one can hope, of her stage persona. Because if that’s really her then it’s astounding anyone would put up with either IRL Annie or Dashcam Annie.

But that’s the joke here. Annie is the walking personification the last two years of asymptomatic idiots who got people killed by refusing to wear a mask. You’ll be screaming for something, anything, to finally get this most unsympathetic of characters, and that’s the real challenge of Dashcam. Annie is a lot to handle, even for the truncated 77-minute run time, and maybe it would work better as a V/H/S 20-minute slot – but then you wouldn’t get quite so amazingly infuriated by her. Dashcam, like few films, relies on your annoyance.

**   

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The Chronicle's first Culture Desk editor, Richard has reported on Austin's growing film production and appreciation scene for over a decade. A graduate of the universities of York, Stirling, and UT-Austin, a Rotten Tomatoes certified critic, and eight-time Best of Austin winner, he's currently at work on two books and a play.