8 reviews
This was a movie that I only heard about thanks to Marknado and his list of what movies were being released in January 2021. It was made into a Featured Review on my podcast when the older movie was from South America and seeing this was from Chile, it was good enough for me. Aside from that, I came into this one pretty blind. The synopsis here is inspired by real events, responding to an urgent call for help, a police officer becomes trapped by the evil spirits of a cursed house.
For this movie, we start off with getting different reports about a haunted house. Coupling with that, we learn that in the 1970's and 1980's there was a curfew in Chile. The police would then check abandoned buildings and this movie here is based on an actual case when this happened with this specific house we've been learning about.
We then meet our police officer from the synopsis. His name is Arrigada (Gabriel Cañas). He uses a payphone to call his significant other and we know something happened between them. He tries to apologize, but she's quite upset still. It ends with her hanging up and him being agitated. Back in his car, the dispatcher reaches out to any officers in the area he is in. Someone called in seeing someone in the yard of a building after curfew. Arrigada responds to check it out.
He arrives at the gate and doesn't see anything at first. We see a creepy woman, who I believe is Camila Carreño, staring at him. She is wounded, but she disappears before he can see. When he hears screams, he reports it in and then decides to check it out. He hears it again and goes inside. He requests back up, but it won't be there for close to an hour. This becomes a traumatic night for him as he encounters other specters and even possible a demon. Can he survive this ordeal though?
Now my recap here is a bit short, but to be honest, there isn't a lot to the story. I was actually questioning some things when I started writing this to make sure that I didn't miss anything. I was excited to see the low runtime of 75 minutes. The downside here is that it flies by without really giving us any substance. Hindsight being what it is, if this movie is inspired by real events, there is that fine line of just adding things to add it and lose some of the real story.
I don't want you think that I hated this movie as that is not the case. This movie creeped me out. It is effective with building the atmosphere along with scares. We get a ghost that is hung, portrayed by Carol Campos, along with the ghost girl, a ghost man who is played by Carlos Cortez and then a demon who is done by Felipe Silva Rodriguez. There are times where one of the ghosts will appear. Arriagada might see them or it could be just us. When they do these things, it is unnerving to me. The demon tends to be involved with more jump-scares. Regardless, I think the effects which include the blood on these ghosts looks good. There could be a bit of CGI with the demon from what I remember as well.
Where I want to take this next would be the cinematography. This movie is shot with a handheld camera. The quality is fine, but the camera is quite shaky. It almost feels like we're getting a found footage movie at times, but it isn't technically in that sub-genre. There is a more personal feel to the movie with this. The camera will be in the backseat to the character and for the most part, we are seeing Arriagada and his reactions to things. It will also look at something spooky, look away and come back. When it does, nothing is there. This is used pretty strategic at times.
I will then take it to the acting. We really only get Cañas' performance and I think does well in his role. It is interesting that we hear him over the phone in his first scene. From there he responds to the call and it is hinted that there could be a scandal over the radio with dispatch. I think the movie would have been better suited to develop or give us more of this story here. It is one of my problems that there's no meat on the bones of this story. As I'm going through this review to post it, they could have incorporated his issues at home more into the ordeal in the house to build as well. His acting along with the voices of dispatch, his ex and those playing entity are fine.
That is all I really wanted to go into with this movie. This is shorter, but I think I've explained and went into everything that I can here. I think this movie does a great job with establishing the concept and building the spooky atmosphere. What it is lacking though is actually fleshing out enough of the story. The movie runs 75 minutes and I found myself losing interest as there wasn't enough for me to sink into. The acting is solid. The effects we get for the most are fine and the cinematography works. Another aspect that I enjoyed was the soundtrack that helps build the feel for this movie. Overall though, this is above average. I think with a bit more; we really could have had something here.
For this movie, we start off with getting different reports about a haunted house. Coupling with that, we learn that in the 1970's and 1980's there was a curfew in Chile. The police would then check abandoned buildings and this movie here is based on an actual case when this happened with this specific house we've been learning about.
We then meet our police officer from the synopsis. His name is Arrigada (Gabriel Cañas). He uses a payphone to call his significant other and we know something happened between them. He tries to apologize, but she's quite upset still. It ends with her hanging up and him being agitated. Back in his car, the dispatcher reaches out to any officers in the area he is in. Someone called in seeing someone in the yard of a building after curfew. Arrigada responds to check it out.
He arrives at the gate and doesn't see anything at first. We see a creepy woman, who I believe is Camila Carreño, staring at him. She is wounded, but she disappears before he can see. When he hears screams, he reports it in and then decides to check it out. He hears it again and goes inside. He requests back up, but it won't be there for close to an hour. This becomes a traumatic night for him as he encounters other specters and even possible a demon. Can he survive this ordeal though?
Now my recap here is a bit short, but to be honest, there isn't a lot to the story. I was actually questioning some things when I started writing this to make sure that I didn't miss anything. I was excited to see the low runtime of 75 minutes. The downside here is that it flies by without really giving us any substance. Hindsight being what it is, if this movie is inspired by real events, there is that fine line of just adding things to add it and lose some of the real story.
I don't want you think that I hated this movie as that is not the case. This movie creeped me out. It is effective with building the atmosphere along with scares. We get a ghost that is hung, portrayed by Carol Campos, along with the ghost girl, a ghost man who is played by Carlos Cortez and then a demon who is done by Felipe Silva Rodriguez. There are times where one of the ghosts will appear. Arriagada might see them or it could be just us. When they do these things, it is unnerving to me. The demon tends to be involved with more jump-scares. Regardless, I think the effects which include the blood on these ghosts looks good. There could be a bit of CGI with the demon from what I remember as well.
Where I want to take this next would be the cinematography. This movie is shot with a handheld camera. The quality is fine, but the camera is quite shaky. It almost feels like we're getting a found footage movie at times, but it isn't technically in that sub-genre. There is a more personal feel to the movie with this. The camera will be in the backseat to the character and for the most part, we are seeing Arriagada and his reactions to things. It will also look at something spooky, look away and come back. When it does, nothing is there. This is used pretty strategic at times.
I will then take it to the acting. We really only get Cañas' performance and I think does well in his role. It is interesting that we hear him over the phone in his first scene. From there he responds to the call and it is hinted that there could be a scandal over the radio with dispatch. I think the movie would have been better suited to develop or give us more of this story here. It is one of my problems that there's no meat on the bones of this story. As I'm going through this review to post it, they could have incorporated his issues at home more into the ordeal in the house to build as well. His acting along with the voices of dispatch, his ex and those playing entity are fine.
That is all I really wanted to go into with this movie. This is shorter, but I think I've explained and went into everything that I can here. I think this movie does a great job with establishing the concept and building the spooky atmosphere. What it is lacking though is actually fleshing out enough of the story. The movie runs 75 minutes and I found myself losing interest as there wasn't enough for me to sink into. The acting is solid. The effects we get for the most are fine and the cinematography works. Another aspect that I enjoyed was the soundtrack that helps build the feel for this movie. Overall though, this is above average. I think with a bit more; we really could have had something here.
- Reviews_of_the_Dead
- Feb 8, 2021
- Permalink
The movie is an amateur effort at best. The first 20+ minutes getting to the house is minutes on end of the cop driving to the house..a nice "back of his head" shot, with nothing else going on but Spooky music. The use of basic strobe and flood lights is also very obvious! Done on the cheap! I don't mind a low budget effort, but MAKE an effort rather then pad the runtime. On a positive note, the ghosts ARE creepy when they start showing up..but it's too little, too late and can't save this borefest. Avoid it!
- jorgito2001
- Aug 18, 2021
- Permalink
I would give a zero if I could. Don't know why that review said it was "fast paced". It was sooooo slow. 90% of the movie was the guy slowly walking around the house with a flashlight looking scared. Every now and then a ghost or demon made an brief appearance.
Absolute and total waste of time. I don't understand how this got made.
LA CASA (The House) is a nifty little haunted house feature from Chile that dares to put practically the entire movie on the shoulders of its protagonist. Apart from rather superfluous footage of film-making crews roaming the house bookending the movie, it gives a real-time account of a Chilean cop in 1986 who responds to a disturbance call and enters a house with gruesome and reputedly demonic history (without knowing about its past).
When there is only one character for most of the duration of the movie, the quality of the acting becomes paramount, but fortunately the actor does a really convincing job of portraying an increasingly terrified cop trapped in the lair of a demon that seems to know his darkest secret.
The increase in tension is very deliberate and the atmosphere is well-executed. There is a twist at the end which was not entirely unforeseeable-it reminded me of a twist in MEMENTO (2000)- but it adds an interesting political dimension which for some reason the film-makers seemed reluctant to explore.
Chile was a military dictatorship between 1973 and 1990, and I would have welcomed a more fleshed-out treatment of this issue, since the film-makers decided to make it an aspect of the movie. It is quite short as is, and if extra time was needed, the bookend footage could have been eliminated with little loss to the integrity of the whole.
The film takes a simple idea and executes it well. It could have elaborated more on the various elements it touches upon, and I think that would have elevated it, but for people looking for a quick diversion barely over an hour long, this bare-bones haunted house story will be fine.
When there is only one character for most of the duration of the movie, the quality of the acting becomes paramount, but fortunately the actor does a really convincing job of portraying an increasingly terrified cop trapped in the lair of a demon that seems to know his darkest secret.
The increase in tension is very deliberate and the atmosphere is well-executed. There is a twist at the end which was not entirely unforeseeable-it reminded me of a twist in MEMENTO (2000)- but it adds an interesting political dimension which for some reason the film-makers seemed reluctant to explore.
Chile was a military dictatorship between 1973 and 1990, and I would have welcomed a more fleshed-out treatment of this issue, since the film-makers decided to make it an aspect of the movie. It is quite short as is, and if extra time was needed, the bookend footage could have been eliminated with little loss to the integrity of the whole.
The film takes a simple idea and executes it well. It could have elaborated more on the various elements it touches upon, and I think that would have elevated it, but for people looking for a quick diversion barely over an hour long, this bare-bones haunted house story will be fine.
- Armin_Nikkhah_Shirazi
- May 25, 2023
- Permalink
- bohdanpashchenkko
- Apr 23, 2021
- Permalink
La Casa is an intimately upsetting paranormal experience. Jorge Olguín stresses said "intimacy" by summoning the horrific reports that have infamously dubbed Chile's "Casa Dubois" one of the country's top haunted destinations. In doing so, cinematography lends itself to found-footage signatures that embrace the first-person aesthetic; a single camera follows the film's protagonist over-shoulder but doesn't exist in continuity. It's an experiment that recalls Silent House, blended with REC
- eliasduranpictures
- Jan 27, 2021
- Permalink
Interesting low budget Latin film, with a simple premise, with a surprising twist and a lot of sinister atmosphere!
- leoosorioreview
- Jun 24, 2021
- Permalink