Agrega una trama en tu idiomaFive friends go to have fun in Bitsevskiy Park. After a while a man comes up to them and demands that they do not litter in the forest. The guys ignore the man, for which they will pay with ... Leer todoFive friends go to have fun in Bitsevskiy Park. After a while a man comes up to them and demands that they do not litter in the forest. The guys ignore the man, for which they will pay with their blood.Five friends go to have fun in Bitsevskiy Park. After a while a man comes up to them and demands that they do not litter in the forest. The guys ignore the man, for which they will pay with their blood.
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Sergey A.'s "Horror of the Bytsevskiy Park" is a curious hybrid-a film that strives for atmospheric dread but inadvertently morphs into a parody of the genre it seeks to honor. Set in the titular Moscow park, the story follows five friends whose littering escapades provoke the wrath of a beer-bellied, unassuming eco-terrorist killer (Daniil Enyutin). What begins as a cautionary tale about environmental disrespect devolves into a blood-soaked, if uneven, experiment in low-budget horror.
The premise is classic slasher fare: carefree youths ignore a stranger's warning, only to face grotesque retribution. Sergey A. Leans into the genre's predictability, but the lack of character development-friends are interchangeable, motivations nonexistent-turns the narrative into a hollow vessel for carnage. The killer's vendetta against littering is a darkly comic twist, yet the script fails to explore this ecological subtext meaningfully .
Sergey A.'s cinematography and color grading are surprisingly polished, with moody blues and grays cloaking the park in perpetual twilight. The camera lingers on eerie landscapes, evoking a sense of isolation reminiscent of "The Blair Witch Project". Practical effects shine: blood splatters are visceral and tactile, a refreshing departure from CGI reliance. A scene involving a hammer and a sewer grate is particularly gruesome.
The oppressive score-a mix of droning synths and discordant strings-elevates tension, though it often feels at odds with the film's campier moments. It's as if the soundtrack belongs to a more serious film, creating a jarring tonal dissonance.
Daniil Enyutin's eco-terrorist killer is the film's standout anomaly. With his paunch, unkempt beard, and mundane demeanor, he defies the chiseled, masked archetype of slasher lore. This choice-a commentary on banality as horror-adds intrigue, but the script's lack of backstory leaves him undercooked. His sporadic monologues ("You'll regret disrespecting the forest!") teeter between chilling and laughable .
The friends' personalities are reduced to "the one with a beer" and "the one who screams." Their deaths lack emotional weight, turning the film into a checklist of slasher clichés. Sergey A.'s serious directorial approach clashes with the amateurish acting and absurd premise. Scenes meant to terrify-like the killer's sudden appearances-often elicit unintended laughs .
While "Horror of the Bytsevskiy Park" lacks the polish of mainstream slashers, it embodies Sergey A.'s DIY ethos. His hands-on involvement (director, writer, cinematographer, editor) showcases ambition, even if the result feels overstretched. The film's accidental parody of environmental horror aligns it with niche "so bad it's good" cult classics, though it lacks the self-awareness to fully lean into camp .
"Horror of the Bytsevskiy Park" is a paradoxical beast-a technically competent film undone by its own genre trappings. While Enyutin's killer and the gritty practical effects offer fleeting thrills, the weak script and tonal confusion relegate it to the realm of unintentional satire. For fans of underground horror, it's a fascinating misfire; for others, a baffling curiosity. A flawed but ambitious experiment. Best viewed with a tolerance for irony and a love of practical gore.
"You think the forest forgets? The forest remembers." - The killer's eco-terrorist mantra, delivered with unsettling earnestness.
The premise is classic slasher fare: carefree youths ignore a stranger's warning, only to face grotesque retribution. Sergey A. Leans into the genre's predictability, but the lack of character development-friends are interchangeable, motivations nonexistent-turns the narrative into a hollow vessel for carnage. The killer's vendetta against littering is a darkly comic twist, yet the script fails to explore this ecological subtext meaningfully .
Sergey A.'s cinematography and color grading are surprisingly polished, with moody blues and grays cloaking the park in perpetual twilight. The camera lingers on eerie landscapes, evoking a sense of isolation reminiscent of "The Blair Witch Project". Practical effects shine: blood splatters are visceral and tactile, a refreshing departure from CGI reliance. A scene involving a hammer and a sewer grate is particularly gruesome.
The oppressive score-a mix of droning synths and discordant strings-elevates tension, though it often feels at odds with the film's campier moments. It's as if the soundtrack belongs to a more serious film, creating a jarring tonal dissonance.
Daniil Enyutin's eco-terrorist killer is the film's standout anomaly. With his paunch, unkempt beard, and mundane demeanor, he defies the chiseled, masked archetype of slasher lore. This choice-a commentary on banality as horror-adds intrigue, but the script's lack of backstory leaves him undercooked. His sporadic monologues ("You'll regret disrespecting the forest!") teeter between chilling and laughable .
The friends' personalities are reduced to "the one with a beer" and "the one who screams." Their deaths lack emotional weight, turning the film into a checklist of slasher clichés. Sergey A.'s serious directorial approach clashes with the amateurish acting and absurd premise. Scenes meant to terrify-like the killer's sudden appearances-often elicit unintended laughs .
While "Horror of the Bytsevskiy Park" lacks the polish of mainstream slashers, it embodies Sergey A.'s DIY ethos. His hands-on involvement (director, writer, cinematographer, editor) showcases ambition, even if the result feels overstretched. The film's accidental parody of environmental horror aligns it with niche "so bad it's good" cult classics, though it lacks the self-awareness to fully lean into camp .
"Horror of the Bytsevskiy Park" is a paradoxical beast-a technically competent film undone by its own genre trappings. While Enyutin's killer and the gritty practical effects offer fleeting thrills, the weak script and tonal confusion relegate it to the realm of unintentional satire. For fans of underground horror, it's a fascinating misfire; for others, a baffling curiosity. A flawed but ambitious experiment. Best viewed with a tolerance for irony and a love of practical gore.
"You think the forest forgets? The forest remembers." - The killer's eco-terrorist mantra, delivered with unsettling earnestness.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaOn the day of filming, Ivan Shakhov did not arrive, as he was urgently called to work. Sergey A., taking advantage of Ivan's absence, made a film according to his concept, preserving the structure of Ivan's script and the main characters, but most of the dialogues did not adhere to the script and were improvised by the actors.
- ConexionesFeatured in Major Dron and the plague doctor 2 (2022)
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Ужас Битцевского парка
- Locaciones de filmación
- Moscú, Rusia(city)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- RUR 6,660 (estimado)
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By what name was Horror of the Bitsevskiy park (2021) officially released in Canada in English?
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