ÉVALUATION IMDb
4,4/10
3,3 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA group of high school students whose school bus crashes on a field trip. Relationships are tested once they realize they are being stalked by an attacker who intends to drive them out and s... Tout lireA group of high school students whose school bus crashes on a field trip. Relationships are tested once they realize they are being stalked by an attacker who intends to drive them out and straight into a horrifying fight to survive.A group of high school students whose school bus crashes on a field trip. Relationships are tested once they realize they are being stalked by an attacker who intends to drive them out and straight into a horrifying fight to survive.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Blake Burt
- Ryan
- (as Blake C. Burt)
Lucy Burvant
- Candace
- (uncredited)
- …
Tyler Galpin
- Karlak
- (uncredited)
- …
Angel Lia Spitale
- Juniper
- (uncredited)
- …
Devin Stovall
- Wagoner
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
Boring, too many awkward cliches, bad acting and corny. I cannot with this movie the trailer was enticing tho. 20 min passed i'm already forcing myself to keep watching, i stopped watching after 1hr it's just not working for me. I felt like i've wasted 1hr of my time with this. The idea was there but it was a flop. Even the zombies are a miss, 30min passed i already knew who the antagonist was that's how cliche this is plus reasoning, lines, expressions and the plot were all rubbish. It's just... 3/10 should've been lower but they were able to trick me into thinking that it's good because of the trailer so i'd give them that. Lol.
The movie is plagued by a tired idea everyone has already seen in dozens of other movies. Within the first ten minutes of the film, the viewer knows who the villains are and who the heroine is.
Fresh young faces, the lack of tedious CGI, and fairly decent production values combine to do a good job of holding the viewer's interest, but aren't sufficient to make this into a good movie. Still, it's great to see young filmmakers get a chance like this one, and I hope this group makes a better movie next time.
As for this film, the company should start with a better script, better editing, and better zombies.
Fresh young faces, the lack of tedious CGI, and fairly decent production values combine to do a good job of holding the viewer's interest, but aren't sufficient to make this into a good movie. Still, it's great to see young filmmakers get a chance like this one, and I hope this group makes a better movie next time.
As for this film, the company should start with a better script, better editing, and better zombies.
The plot of the movie was basic and not interesting, at all. Eventually, the plot of the movie has nothing to do with the movie. The storyline was kinda clever, but there were some plot holes. The execution, wasn't successfully done. The characters were basic, not well-developed and uninteresting. The location of the movie was just okay, just a big abandoned building. The cinematography was just okay, it reminded me of a YouTube video style, lol. The kills were AWFUL, most kills were off-screen and not bloody at all. It wasn't scary and the jumpscares were predictable. The casting was nice and the acting was descent. The plot twist was totally unexpected and it was kinda good.. Overall, it was a low budget horror movie, kinda innovative, but it wasn't well-developed.. The ending scene was unexpected. I don't think a sequel is needed. Actually, I don't think they're gonna make a second movie.
This movie has cinematography and editing that's usually reserved for music videos. It utilizes some quick and peculiar edits, unnecessary uses of slow motion, and YouTube video style transitions. Unlike a five minute music video where such production techniques may work, it gets tedious in a full length feature film. Some of the dialogue, especially the feel good monologue near the end of the film wouldn't be out of place in a Hallmark made-for-TV movie or an ABC after school special.
All of the characters represent typical high school cliche caricatures. They try to add some characterization and depth to some of the characters, but it's anything but nuanced. They also try to do something different with the genre too. There's a twist in the third act that tries to subvert your expectations. Unfortunately, this twist doesn't really work logically. How did the perpetrators plan to actually get away with their Machiavellian plot once everything was over? The authorities would have a lot of questions, and you'd think anyone who put this much thought and effort into their plan would have considered this. The movie hopes you don't think about it.
The production value isn't that bad, surprisingly. There's some decent practical effects, and it doesn't look or feel like most lower budget horror movies. The movie maintains a fairly frantic pace throughout most of it's run time. The director subscribes to the J. J. Abrams and Michael Bay school of film making: where they try to keep the pace of the movie fast enough to distract the audience from actually thinking about the plot. It's obvious that those responsible for this production tried to make the best movie they could. There's effort put into it's production that elevate it above many low budget horror movies. The sets, lighting, cinematography, sound and effects, editing, and everything else that makes a movie are all in service of trying to entertain their audience.
Unfortunately, it didn't work for me. Any movie that destroys my suspension of disbelief by making me question the logic of the plot, characters, or the universe the movie exists in, has failed at being effective entertainment. Well before the twist was revealed I was already taken out of the movie because things weren't adding up. Once the twist happens, all immersion is broken when you realize it doesn't really make sense. How could they possibly think they'd get away with their plan, and once you ask yourself that, the narrative fails. The twist seems necessary, since the opening title cards say "Blumhouse After-School Special" and "Presented by the Student Teachers Division." Which explains the hackneyed morality injected into the script throughout the movie, and the necessity of that last cheesy monologue near the end of the movie too.
It's not an offensively bad movie by any stretch. It's got a fast pace, and it tries to keep its audience entertained. Although it's obviously made on a lower budget, nothing about it's production looks or feels cheap or lazy. It tried to do something creative within the genre, which is always welcome over the assembly line, paint by numbers productions that inundate most entertainment today. The cliche characters, nonsensical plot, and overt injection of it's themes and message just can't be ignored. Others may find the film more entertaining, but it didn't work for me.
All of the characters represent typical high school cliche caricatures. They try to add some characterization and depth to some of the characters, but it's anything but nuanced. They also try to do something different with the genre too. There's a twist in the third act that tries to subvert your expectations. Unfortunately, this twist doesn't really work logically. How did the perpetrators plan to actually get away with their Machiavellian plot once everything was over? The authorities would have a lot of questions, and you'd think anyone who put this much thought and effort into their plan would have considered this. The movie hopes you don't think about it.
The production value isn't that bad, surprisingly. There's some decent practical effects, and it doesn't look or feel like most lower budget horror movies. The movie maintains a fairly frantic pace throughout most of it's run time. The director subscribes to the J. J. Abrams and Michael Bay school of film making: where they try to keep the pace of the movie fast enough to distract the audience from actually thinking about the plot. It's obvious that those responsible for this production tried to make the best movie they could. There's effort put into it's production that elevate it above many low budget horror movies. The sets, lighting, cinematography, sound and effects, editing, and everything else that makes a movie are all in service of trying to entertain their audience.
Unfortunately, it didn't work for me. Any movie that destroys my suspension of disbelief by making me question the logic of the plot, characters, or the universe the movie exists in, has failed at being effective entertainment. Well before the twist was revealed I was already taken out of the movie because things weren't adding up. Once the twist happens, all immersion is broken when you realize it doesn't really make sense. How could they possibly think they'd get away with their plan, and once you ask yourself that, the narrative fails. The twist seems necessary, since the opening title cards say "Blumhouse After-School Special" and "Presented by the Student Teachers Division." Which explains the hackneyed morality injected into the script throughout the movie, and the necessity of that last cheesy monologue near the end of the movie too.
It's not an offensively bad movie by any stretch. It's got a fast pace, and it tries to keep its audience entertained. Although it's obviously made on a lower budget, nothing about it's production looks or feels cheap or lazy. It tried to do something creative within the genre, which is always welcome over the assembly line, paint by numbers productions that inundate most entertainment today. The cliche characters, nonsensical plot, and overt injection of it's themes and message just can't be ignored. Others may find the film more entertaining, but it didn't work for me.
What started off as a typical cheesy teen horror movie that would be serviceable for B flick horror fans turned into a nightmare itself. Clearly this director tried to follow suit with other Blumhouse directors by turning up a huge plot twist for its audience but instead turned up an epic fail of direction, execution and any sense of practicality for even a Zombie flick.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhen Candace is lost in the mist she is screaming "Oh God, help me please! Hello? Help me! Can't you hear me? Oh God, help me! Please! Help me!" This is the exact same dialogue being said by Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) when she is running from Michael Myers at the end of Halloween (1978).
- Générique farfeluThere is a mid credit scene in which Randall and Steven are being made a rather weird offer.
- ConnexionsReferences La nuit des morts vivants (1968)
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39:1
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