ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,2/10
33 k
MA NOTE
Un groupe d'étudiantes essaie de dissimuler la mort de leur amie après une blague qui a mal tourné et elles se retrouvent traquées par un tueur en série.Un groupe d'étudiantes essaie de dissimuler la mort de leur amie après une blague qui a mal tourné et elles se retrouvent traquées par un tueur en série.Un groupe d'étudiantes essaie de dissimuler la mort de leur amie après une blague qui a mal tourné et elles se retrouvent traquées par un tueur en série.
- Prix
- 2 nominations au total
Teri Andrez
- Bra-Clad Sister
- (as Teri Andrzejewski)
Adam Barrie
- Danny
- (as Adam Berry)
Megan Wolfley
- Trampoline Sister
- (as Megan Elizabeth Wolfley)
Robert Belushi
- Amazed Senior Guy
- (as Rob Belushi)
Zack Garrett
- Thwarted Guy
- (as Zachary Garrett)
Matt Cannon
- Nerdy Underclassman
- (as Matthew Cannon)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe bird-shaped cane that Cassidy grabs for a weapon in one scene is an homage to Sept femmes piégées (1982), as it's the same style cane that Mrs. Slater carries in that film.
- GaffesWhen Jessica is killed her eyes are open. When the shot pans out her eyes are closed. Then when the killer removes the tire iron from her mouth her eyes are open again.
- Générique farfeluThe Summit Entertainment logo is tinted a light red which then descends through a series of outlined tree branches
Commentaire en vedette
With it's excessively asinine plot, crazy killer armed with a particularly impractical weapon (a modified tire iron), exaggerated death scenes, a larger-than-normal quota of bitchy, big breasted bimbos (including the obligatory sexy nerd) and their equally obnoxious boyfriends, and a fair smattering of gratuitous nudity, I'm pretty certain that Sorority Row was intended by its makers to parody the countless, moronic, teen slasher remakes that have blighted horror in recent years. However, it appears that their motive may have been lost on many viewers, who seem to have mistaken the deliberate playing up of genre stereotypes and intentional over-use of dumb clichés for a case of plain, old-fashioned bad movie-making—something which there has been plenty of over the last decade or so.
It's a shame, because when armed with the knowledge that much of the film's apparent awfulness is by design, one can have quite a bit of fun with Sorority Row.
The film opens with one of those frat parties that only ever seem to happen in the movies (or maybe I just went to the wrong parties): it's thumping with the latest cool tunes, heaving with physically perfect specimens of both sexes indulging in all manner of hedonistic activities, and overflowing with an endless supply of alcohol. Whilst the gorgeous revellers bump, grind and get wasted, six sexy sorority sisters carry out a mean prank that will have disastrous results: they con a poor schmuck into believing that he has accidentally killed his ex-girlfriend Megan by plying her with drugs. Carrying the joke a little too far, they also convince him that it would be a good idea to hide his crime by pushing her body into a lake located near a disused mine. Unfortunately, before they can reveal that it is all a sick joke, events spiral out of control, and Megan winds up dying for real when the guy plunges a tire iron into her chest (to let the air out of her lungs so that she will sink). Now the group are forced to dispose of a genuine corpse—opting to dump their dead friend down the mine-shaft.
A year later, as the girls celebrate their graduation, a hooded murderer is busy at work on the campus. Is it Megan, back from the dead for revenge, or does someone else have a motive for the rapidly rising body count?
What follows is undeniably silly, but as I have said, when viewed with the right frame of mind, it's also rather enjoyable; one can have fun spotting the deliberate attempts by the makers to ridicule the more idiotic conventions of the genre (the over privileged students, the stern but protective den mother, the innocent girl who unwillingly goes along with her friends' plans) whilst also revelling in the brutal violence, ogling the many attractive women, cheering on a shotgun toting Carrie Fisher, and marvelling at just how much Rumer Willis sounds like her mother.
It's not a brilliant piece of film-making (if it was, the parodic content would have been obvious to all), but it's not nearly as dreadful as many might have you believe. I rate Sorority Row a reasonable 6/10. Give it a chance.
It's a shame, because when armed with the knowledge that much of the film's apparent awfulness is by design, one can have quite a bit of fun with Sorority Row.
The film opens with one of those frat parties that only ever seem to happen in the movies (or maybe I just went to the wrong parties): it's thumping with the latest cool tunes, heaving with physically perfect specimens of both sexes indulging in all manner of hedonistic activities, and overflowing with an endless supply of alcohol. Whilst the gorgeous revellers bump, grind and get wasted, six sexy sorority sisters carry out a mean prank that will have disastrous results: they con a poor schmuck into believing that he has accidentally killed his ex-girlfriend Megan by plying her with drugs. Carrying the joke a little too far, they also convince him that it would be a good idea to hide his crime by pushing her body into a lake located near a disused mine. Unfortunately, before they can reveal that it is all a sick joke, events spiral out of control, and Megan winds up dying for real when the guy plunges a tire iron into her chest (to let the air out of her lungs so that she will sink). Now the group are forced to dispose of a genuine corpse—opting to dump their dead friend down the mine-shaft.
A year later, as the girls celebrate their graduation, a hooded murderer is busy at work on the campus. Is it Megan, back from the dead for revenge, or does someone else have a motive for the rapidly rising body count?
What follows is undeniably silly, but as I have said, when viewed with the right frame of mind, it's also rather enjoyable; one can have fun spotting the deliberate attempts by the makers to ridicule the more idiotic conventions of the genre (the over privileged students, the stern but protective den mother, the innocent girl who unwillingly goes along with her friends' plans) whilst also revelling in the brutal violence, ogling the many attractive women, cheering on a shotgun toting Carrie Fisher, and marvelling at just how much Rumer Willis sounds like her mother.
It's not a brilliant piece of film-making (if it was, the parodic content would have been obvious to all), but it's not nearly as dreadful as many might have you believe. I rate Sorority Row a reasonable 6/10. Give it a chance.
- BA_Harrison
- 3 juin 2010
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Sorority Row
- Lieux de tournage
- Crafton, Pennsylvanie, États-Unis(interiors)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 12 500 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 11 965 282 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 5 059 802 $ US
- 13 sept. 2009
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 27 206 120 $ US
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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