Showing posts with label Horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horror. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 09, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: ANGUISH

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From IMDB:

Tess is a teenage girl diagnosed with identity disorder, however that may not be the problem after all. Lucy, a teenage girl who's in the same town, and around the same age. The unlikely pair meet in a way that so few people actually understand, and usually misinterpret.
Reviews 10 user | 43 critic


From Rotten Tomatoes:

A new girl in a quiet town, Tess (Ryan Simpkins) tries to manage her psychosis while adjusting to her new life with her mom (Annika Marks). After stumbling upon the shrine of Lucy (Amberley Gridley), a hit and run victim, Tess finds herself overwhelmed by hallucinations of the dead girl and starts to question her sanity again. When the spirit possesses Tess's mind and soul, mother and daughter are at a loss for where to turn next for salvation: religion or medicine? Both institutions have failed them to date but faith leads them to the house of Sarah (Karina Logue), Lucy's mother, who has been despondent since the accident. All together with time working against them, Sarah is desperate to believe that Lucy is still alive in Tess but neither parent wants to give up on their daughter. Now that she understands what is happening to her, ultimately Tess must decide whether she wants to keep fighting or succumb to her affliction.

Rating: NR
Genre: Horror
Directed By: Sonny Mallhi
Written By: Sonny Mallhi
In Theaters: Dec 18, 2015 Limited
On DVD: Apr 5, 2016
Runtime: 91 minutes
Studio: Anguish Film


TOMATOMETER 50%
Average Rating: 4.7/10
Reviews Counted: 10
Fresh: 5
Rotten: 5

Critics Consensus: No consensus yet.

AUDIENCE SCORE 25% liked it
Average Rating: 2.4/5
User Ratings: 239

This is Tess she isn't like other teenagers. She hears and sees things. 

This isn't your typical thriller/ horror film...

So Anguish, not a new movie it had a limited release in the US last year before going to DVD and VOD. Written and Directed by Sonny Mallhi, this is his directorial debut after acting as producer on such films as The Lake House (2006), The Strangers (2008) and Oldboy (2013). If you're a fan of the genre you've either already seen this or have surely heard about it or even read the many, many reviews written about it. I am not a fan of the genre and didn't know anything about this film until I saw the trailer for it a few days ago. 

That is a picture of Lucy. She died in an accident. 

The trailer does a very good job of leading you on to believe that this is just another run-of-the-mill horror movie about demonic possession. 

Anyway, I'm not going to go into any details or background about this movie so I'm going to go direct to what I liked and didn't fancy much. 

No that's not a strange party game happening inside there.

What I liked.
  • The story. It's interesting. Different. Not perfect but different.
  • The cast especially the Ryan Simpkins who plays Tess. This movie isn't heavy on the dialogue but what it lacks is made up by Ryan's performance. Very subtle and dramatic. 
  • The atmosphere. The lack or maybe refusal to use the tired old horror genre gimmicks and tricks to scare you. Instead this movie relies on building the tension with a slow visual pace accompanied by score and sound design. It works pretty well.
  • The camera work was quite delightful. 
  • The twists. When you've watched enough horror/thriller movies you sort of get a sense of what's about to happen. You can guess how things might turn out or will happen. This movie I think takes advantage of that. 
  • The all female cast was a refreshing change. And with that refreshing change came an interesting difference when compared to other films of the genre, the way the situations is dealt with. 
And that's not a loving hug that she's receiving. 

What I didn't fancy much. 
  • Right at the start they state that this is inspired by true events and also a statement about how mental illness is approached and treated in the U.S., this of course leaves you with a few preconceived ideas about what the story is about. So yes, Ryan does suffer from some form of mental illness but then when she gets possessed by Lucy (Amberley Gridley) and then we hear from Lucy's mom (Karina Logue) tell Tess's mom (Annika Marks) about how when she was younger she used to move a lot because of her missionary parents and that in India she witnessed a woman get possessed by spirits of the dead in order to give closure to those still living, I sort of wondered what the director is trying to say. What is the takeaway message or moral of this movie especially when you consider that opening statement in the beginning and the way the story unravels? I found that to be a little confusing.
  • The pace. I sort of like it and hate it. This movie if you're not prepared for it, if you were expecting it to be like a lot of other films in the genre that was recently released then you may find it a little odd or maybe even disappointing. You might even find it a little tedious and dull because of its deliberate pacing. So be warned and be prepared. 
Closets and narrow hallways seem to be a favorite place that possessed people like to hang out in. 

Anguish is an unusual movie for the genre, it leads you on thinking you're going to get the same twists or the same plots and solutions but it doesn't. It feels like an Indie movie in many ways but there's that supernatural/horror/thriller element to it and also the different way the the characters and the story eventually resolves the situation. Anguish isn't for everyone. It certainly isn't for those looking for the usually supernatural/horror/thriller fare but if you're willing to give it a chance and are prepared for something different you might find yourself entertained. Anguish gets a decent 2.8 out of 5 from me.

Check out the trailer for Anguish below.


A GREAT BIG THANKS TO TGV PICTURES AND CINEMAONLINE.COM.MY FOR THE PREMIERE PASSES!!





Friday, November 04, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: OUIJA: ORIGIN OF EVIL (2016)

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From IMDB:

In 1965 Los Angeles, a widowed mother and her two daughters add a new stunt to bolster their seance scam business and unwittingly invite authentic evil into their home. When the youngest daughter is overtaken by a merciless spirit, the family confronts unthinkable fears to save her and send her possessor back to the other side.

Ouija: Origin of Evil (2016) on IMDb

Reviews 49 user | 138 critic


From Rotten Tomatoes:

In this horror sequel, a game of Ouija leads to supernatural activity. Annalise Basso, Henry Thomas, Doug Jones, and Elizabeth Reaser star. Directed by Mike Flanagan.

Rating: PG-13 (for disturbing images, terror and thematic elements)
Genre: Horror , Mystery & Suspense
Directed By: Mike Flanagan
In Theaters: Oct 20, 2016 Wide
Box Office: $24,678,810.00
Runtime: 99 minutes

TOMATOMETER 82%
Average Rating: 6.2/10
Reviews Counted: 92
Fresh: 75
Rotten: 17

Critics Consensus: Ouija: Origin of Evil swerves its franchise's planchette unexpectedly to YES with a surprisingly scary and dramatically satisfying follow-up to its lackluster predecessor.

AUDIENCE SCORE 64% liked it
Average Rating: 3.5/5
User Ratings: 7,876

OUIJA: ORIGIN OF EVIL OPENED IN THE U.S. ON THE 21st OF OCTOBER AND IN MALAYSIA ON THE 3rd OF NOVEMBER. TO FIND OUT WHEN IT OPENS IN A CINEMA NEAR YOU CLICK HERE

Problems always start when you do things alone, especially when you deal with the supernatural. ©Universal Pictures

The Ouija Board, it's a lot older than you think it is...

Okay, let's start off with an admission, I did not see the first movie Ouija (2014) but checking out various popular movie rating sites lets me know that it wasn't very good. So as with other situations such as this I'll be sharing my opinions without comparing it to the movie that came before it. 

So the Ouija board, a board with a bunch of letters and a couple of words which you would then use a planchette where you and your friends put your fingers on. Then you say some words to summon the spirits and then proceed to ask whatever questions pop into your mind, it could be about the future, your future, the afterlife, etc. Sounds like fun, right? But the Ouija board isn't something new, there's been something like it in existence throughout history, used by shamans, wisemen, soothsayers and many more. 

I guess when you're a teenager you don't really care that your kid sister is acting weird until it's too late. ©Universal Pictures

What the Ouija board is supposed to do while your fingers are on that planchette is to do what is called planchette writing or spirit-writing or also known as automatic writing. Presumably when you say those summoning words and you ask your questions a spirit will slowly move the planchette to answer yes or no or spell things out for you. All this is done without any of the participants moving the planchette themselves or putting any pressure on it. That's what the players of course believe is currently happening or should happen. But science isn't convinced that that actually happens. What they think happens is called an ideomotor response, it's when your fingers move involuntarily and in an unconscious way and the words that are spelled just happen to be whatever you may be thinking right at that moment when you asked that question. 

I guess a little girl just standing in the middle of the playground isn't all that interesting to the nuns. ©Universal Pictures

Spirit writing has been around for a long time, one of the earliest mentions of it happens to come from China from around 1100 AD from the Song Dynasty. Back then it was called Fuji, and as the Wikipedia puts it, "The use of planchette writing as an ostensible means of necromancy and communion with the spirit-world continued, and, albeit under special rituals and supervisions, was a central practice of the Quanzhen School, until it was forbidden by the Qing Dynasty." But China wasn't the only place in the world that practiced it, it is claimed that similar methods of mediumistic spirit writing have been practiced in ancient India, Greece, Rome, and medieval Europe.

This movie may not be super good but at least it doesn't make you yawn like that up there. ©Universal Pictures

The Ouija board that we see in the movies and that is popular in American Culture on the other hand comes courtesy of a man named Elijah Bond who on July 1, 1890 introduced it to the American public. for a while it was just considered a silly board game by everyone until an American Spiritualist named Pearl Curran used it as a divining tool during World War I. But even before that Spiritualist used to use a similar type of board to so that the living can communicate with the dead in camps in Ohio in 1886. 

Who knew spirits liked to play hide-and-seek. ©Universal Pictures

Now the first movie was actually considered a sequel to the movie that I'll be reviewing in this blog. In that movie, from what I've read, a bunch of teenagers decided to play with the board only to unleash a spirit that begins to kill everyone that played it. Then as the remaining survivors try to figure out what's going on they come across the history of the board that they're playing with and they discover that it has a history. A history involving a family and an unsolved case of a missing person. This movie is that history. 

You know something's up when the school priest decides to join in the seance. ©Universal Pictures

So if you're in the U.S. and are a horror movie fan you've probably already seen it. If you haven't and like horror movies you've probably seen the trailers, right? Or read the synopsis for it by now. Anyway if you haven't it's the story of mother Alice (Elizabeth Reaser) and daughters Lina (Annalise Basso) and Doris (Lulu Wilson) and their struggle to make ends meet. Where's the husband and father? He was killed when a drunk driver drove into him. So to make ends meet Alice provides and unusual service to those who have lost a loved one, she offers to get in touch with them and help them find closure by asking only three questions. Things aren't going so well though. 

If your child begins to act up it may just be a demonic possession. ©Universal Pictures

Then one day Lina sneaks out to hang out at a friends house and while there her friends decide to play with a Ouija Board. While playing they are caught by her friend's mother and Alice is called to pick her up. Alice of course isn't happy and Lina only excuse is that they were just hanging out and playing with the Ouija board. Lina then suggests to her mother that she should consider adding the board as part of her methods of communication. So when she goes to pick up a few supplies the next day it just so happens that the store also just happens to be carrying the board game. 

No she's not trying to seduce her sister's boyfriend. ©Universal Pictures

So now the board game is at their home and Alice is preparing it to use in her work. Now the Ouija board comes with instructions, a couple of really important ones are to never play alone and to always say goodbye. While setting up the board Alice reads of the summoning words alone and when she is done she doesn't say goodbye. While Alice does all that up stairs Doris goes into a trance and begins to answer the questions that Alice is asking downstairs. And so the scary part begins. Doris begins to behave strangely, Lina begins to experience odd things and even having nightmares, Doris begins to write in Polish. And when Lina discovers that Doris has been writing in Polish she takes those notes to Father Tom Hogan (Henry Thomas). When Father Tom has it translated he meets with Lina and Alice and tells them what Doris has written. 

But before he tells them what is written Father Tom decides to test Doris's abilities to talk to the dead. He isn't convinced and when he informs Alice and Lina of what Doris has written the three decide to confront Doris and what is possessing her. 

And here's the required wall/ceiling crawling scene all horror movies these days have. ©Universal Pictures

So here's the good and bad as I see it. 
  • A pretty cool idea to use the Ouija board I guess, it hasn't been done in a while. 
  • The story is decent and predictable but doesn't hold up very well towards the end. Some parts don't make much sense, the discovery of what is possessing Doris isn't at all original or interesting. 
  • It's a slow to build film. Slow in the beginning, better in the middle, loses steam towards the end. 
  • The casting is decent. The main character here is actually Lina and Annalise Basso does a pretty good job. Doris played by Lulu Wilson does a decent job but not all the time. She does do the creepy factor well though. 
  • The scares were okay, it's the usual stuff. Nothing new here. 

Why is always the fault of some crazy doctor? ©Universal Pictures

To be honest this movie wasn't a bad one it's just that there's nothing new or fresh or original about it. Every element in it you've seen somewhere before. Could it have been better? Maybe, maybe not. Could it have been worse? Definitely. For whatever shortcomings or failings this movie has it's still an okay horror movie. If you're looking to waste a few hours and maybe get a few scares in then there are worse options than this one. Not too sure if there are better options playing at the moment. Ouija: Origin of Evil gets a 2.5 out of 5 from me. 

Here's the trailer.


A GREAT BIG THANKS TO BFM RADIO AND UNITED INTERNATIONAL PICTURES MALAYSIA FOR THE PASSES!!



Thursday, August 25, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: LIGHTS OUT (2016)

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From IMDB:

Storyline

When Rebecca left home, she thought she left her childhood fears behind. Growing up, she was never really sure of what was and wasn't real when the lights went out...and now her little brother, Martin, is experiencing the same unexplained and terrifying events that had once tested her sanity and threatened her safety. A frightening entity with a mysterious attachment to their mother, Sophie, has reemerged. But this time, as Rebecca gets closer to unlocking the truth, there is no denying that all their lives are in danger...once the lights go out.

Lights Out (2016) on IMDb


Reviews 109 user | 204 critic



When a bloodthirsty supernatural being that lurks in the shadows preys upon a family, a young woman must fight to protect herself, save her little half-brother, and uncover a mystery about her family's shadowy past.

Rating: PG-13 (for terror throughout, violence including disturbing images, some thematic material and brief drug content)
Genre: Horror
Directed By: David F. Sandberg
Written By: Eric Heisserer
In Theaters: Jul 22, 2016 wide
Box Office: $1,601,441.00
Runtime: 81 minutes

TOMATOMETER 76%
Average Rating: 6.3/10
Reviews Counted: 139
Fresh: 105
Rotten: 34

Critics Consensus: Lights Outmakes skillful use of sturdy genre tropes -- and some terrific performances -- for an unsettling, fright-filled experience that delivers superior chills without skimping on story.

AUDIENCE SCORE 68% liked it
Average Rating: 3.6/5
User Ratings: 19,555

This time it is all mom's fault. ©Warner Bros.

What was once a creepy and intriguing 3 minute video becomes a creepy and somewhat entertaining 80 minute movie...

So in 2013 David F. Sandberg made creepy little video about a woman who on her way to her bedroom turns off the hall lights and begins to see a human silhouette in the dark. Turning on the lights makes it go away but turning it off again brings it back. Anyway, I think it's better that you watch it instead of me writing it out.


That little short eventually got shared and shared and became sort of viral. Viral enough that it caught the attention of Hollywood. That little short was apparently made with; 

Blackmagic cinema camera with Tokina 11-16 lens. Zoom H4n with Rode Ntg1 mic. A paper lantern from ikea. A 375w photo bulb. A Chinese knockoff redhead light from eBay. A Manfrotto tripod. A home made dolly with pvc pipe, a piece of shelving from ikea and skate wheels. (Wikipedia)

The little short was popular enough in Hollywood that apparently it got the attention of Lawrence Grey who took it to the current master of all things horror, James Wan who although he liked the short didn't think it would work as a feature length film. But a feature length treatment by Sandberg did the job of convincing Wan and he and his wife Lotta Losten quit their jobs and left Sweden for Hollywood. When they arrived they lived in Airbnb homes for a while. And in fact when production started Sandberg had no idea how to handle it as it was his first time working on a production of this magnitude. You can read more about Lights Out here.

You work in a factory full of mannequins that alone will give anyone the creeps. ©Warner Bros.

Anyway, this feature length Lights Out if you still have yet to see it is about a particular family who have been, bothered I guess is one way to put it, by a malevolent presence in their home. The presence is intrinsically and emotionally linked to the mother of the family Sophie (Maria Bello), things begin to get worse when her current husband Paul (Billy Burke) is murdered one night in his clothing factory. Soon even her young son Martin (Gabriel Bateman) is feeling threatened by it and goes in search of his step sister Rebecca (Teresa Palmer) to escape it.



And then this thing shows up. ©Warner Bros.

Rebecca confronts her mother over what's going on in the house and when she doesn't get a clear answer from her mother she takes it upon herself to search the house for clues. During her search she is assaulted by the presence and finds a possible clue to what it may be. She finds out that her mother has suffered from severe depression since she was a child and was placed in an institution for a time. At the institution she befriends a girl who suffers an unusual condition where any exposure to sun or bright lights will cause severe burns. Before this girl arrived at the institution she spent most of her life confined to the basement by her parents and when they found her they also found her father dead apparently murdered by her. She was classified as extremely violent by the institution. Their attempts to cure her unusual condition culminated in her being strapped into a chair and exposed to extremely bright lights. The lights caused her to spontaneously combust.

Candles, a contributing factor to many fires in the home and a good weapon against the creeps. ©Warner Bros.

Anyway here's the likes and not so likes.

The likes.
  1. The scares. Although it's the usual tropes and techniques it's done very well. We've all had that feeling late at night of not being alone in an empty house, of seeing things in the corner of your eye or shapes when the lights are turned off. Lights out takes that and puts it on screen pretty well.
  2. The acting. The main cast does a pretty good job with their roles. Pretty convincing throughout.
  3. The visuals. Done very well. Very atmospheric and brilliant use of lights both in the set-up of the scenes as well as in the scenes when the characters are using lights as weapons. 
When things that go bump, creak and anything else start leaving their names, you've got a problem. ©Warner Bros.

The not so likes.
  1. The story. It starts off ok then it becomes predictable. It's a problem all horror films have. Also the reason for the existence of the evil presence is a bit hackneyed. 
  2. The evil presence. You've seen her before. From the way she moves to what she does. It's been done before. So it becomes predictable. 
Here's Diana! ©Warner Bros.

Overall it's an enjoyable movie. It's more of the usual if you've watched enough horror movies but it's done very well. For a first time director who went from making film shorts with things everyone can afford and jumping to a full-length big Hollywood studio backed film it's an impressive first film. Hopefully Sandberg gets to fine tune his skills with better stories to work on in the future. 

I enjoyed the film so I'm giving it a decent 3 out of 5. 

Check out the trailer.



Thursday, April 07, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: BEFORE I WAKE (2016)

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From IMDB:

Storyline

In this intense and heart pounding supernatural thriller, Jessie (Kate Bosworth) and Mark (Thomas Jane) decide to take in a sweet and loving 8-year-old boy, Cody. Unbeknownst to them, Cody is terrified of falling asleep. At first, they assume his previous unstable homes caused his aversion to sleep, but soon discover why: Cody's dreams manifest in reality as he sleeps. In one moment they experience the incredible wonder of Cody's imagination, and in the next, the horrific nature of his night terrors. To save their new family, Jessie and Mark embark on a dangerous hunt to uncover the truth behind Cody's nightmares. BEFORE I WAKE stars Kate Bosworth (Superman Returns), Thomas Jane (TV's "Hung"), Annabeth Gish (TV's "Pretty Little Liars"), Dash Mihok (TV's "Ray Donovan") and introducing Jacob Tremblay as Cody.(C) Relativity

Before I Wake (2016) on IMDb

Rating: PG-13 (for violent contentand terror including disturbing images)
Genre: Mystery & Suspense, Horror
Directed By: Mike Flanagan
Written By: Mike Flanagan, Jeff Howard
Runtime: 1 hr. 37 min.
Relativity Media - Official Site
TOMATOMETER

No critic reviews yet...

WANT TO SEE 92% want to see
User Ratings: 9,579

BEFORE I WAKE POSSIBLY OPENS IN THE US ON THE 8th OF APRIL AND IN MALAYSIA ON THE 7th OF APRIL. CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT WHEN IT OPENS IN YOUR CITY.

Meet Jessie and Mark, they're excited to meet their new son. ©Relativity Media

Another horror/thriller where a young boy has supernatural abilities...

Tuesday, April 05, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: THE FAITH OF ANNA WATERS (2016)

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Storyline

When young and successful reporter Jamie finds out that her sister has died in mysterious circumstances, she travels to Singapore to uncover the truth. There, she discovers multiple deaths linked to her sister's and must join forces with her sister's husband in order to defeat a demonic entity that is using new technology to complete an ancient mission.
Rating: Unrated
Genre: Horror
Directed By: Kelvin Tong
Written By: Kelvin Tong
Runtime: 1 hr. 35 min.
Boku Films: Official Website

THE FAITH OF ANNA WINTERS OPENS IN MALAYSIA ON THE 31st OF MARCH AND IN THE US ON THE 6th OF MAY. TO FIND OUT WHEN IT OPENS NEAR YOU CLICK HERE.

Here's the investigative journalist Jamie with her brother-in-law Sam who is also a journalist trying to figure out the mystery.

So another horror movie that takes place in Asia...

Thursday, February 25, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: THE OTHER SIDE OF THE DOOR (2016)

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From IMDB:

Storyline

A family lives an idyllic existence abroad until a tragic accident takes the life of their young son. The inconsolable mother learns of an ancient ritual that will bring him back to say a final goodbye. She travels to an ancient temple, where a door serves as a mysterious portal between two worlds. But when she disobeys a sacred warning to never open that door, she upsets the balance between life and death. Written by 20th Century Fox
The Other Side of the Door (2016) on IMDb


From Rotten Tomatoes:

Movie Info


Rating: R (for some bloody violence)
Genre: Mystery & Suspense, Horror
Directed By: Johannes Roberts
Written By: Johannes Roberts, Ernest Riera
Runtime: 1 hr. 36 min.

TOMATOMETER: No Tomatometer score yet...
Average Rating: N/A | Reviews Counted: 2
Fresh: 0 | Rotten: 2

WANT TO SEE 84% want to see
User Ratings: 863

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE DOOR OPENS ON THE 4th OF MARCH IN THE US AND ON THE 25th OF FEBRUARY IN MALAYSIA. TO FIND OUT WHEN IT COMES TO A CINEMA NEAR YOU CLICK HERE.

So instead of seance you're supposed to travel on a train, hike through a forest, sit in an abandoned temple until nightfall to talk to your dead loved ones. Sounds like a good idea. ©20th Century Fox

Everything familiar but the location...

Thursday, January 07, 2016

MOVIE REVIEW: THE FOREST (2016)

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Storyline

The story is set in the Aokigahara Forest, a forest at the northwest base of Mount Fuji in Japan where people go to commit suicide. Sara Price (Natalie Dormer), a young American woman, arrives at the forest in search of her twin sister, who mysteriously disappeared. Despite warnings not to "stray from the path," Sara enters the forest to discover the truth about her sister's fate, only to be confronted by the angry and tormented souls of the dead who now prey on unsuspecting victims.|

Rating: PG-13 (for disturbing thematic content and images)
Genre: Drama, Horror
Directed By: Jason Zada
Gramercy Pictures

THE FOREST OPENS ON THE 7th OF JANUARY IN MALAYSIA AND ON THE 8th IN THE U.S. FOR EVERYWHERE ELSE CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT WHEN. 

Meet Sara, like all twins in movies she has a "special connection" to her sister. ©Sony Pictures Releasing

A movie that takes place in a part of Japan that few who visit Japan will visit... 

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

MOVIE REVIEW: VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN (2015)

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FROM IMDB:

Told from Igor's perspective, we see the troubled young assistant's dark origins, his redemptive friendship with the young medical student Viktor Von Frankenstein, and become eyewitnesses to the emergence of how Frankenstein became the man - and the legend - we know today.

Ratings: 7.0/10 from 70 users 

VICTOR FRANKENSTEIN OPENS IN MALAYSIA ON THE 26th OF NOVEMBER TO FIND OUT WHEN IT OPENS NEAR YOU CLICK HERE.


So another Frankenstein movie…

You’d think that there would be tons of films about the famous monster created by author Mary Wallstonecraft Shelley who’s book came out in 1818, although in the first pressing her name wasn’t there as the author of the story. It was only in 1823 when the second edition of the book was published in France di her name appear as the author. Like I was saying before you’d think that there would be lots films about Frankenstein and you’d be right but most would concentrate on the monster not the creator and it would most definitely not feature the famous assistant Igor in the story.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

MOVIE REVIEW: COOTIES (2015)

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From IMDB:

Storyline

A mysterious virus hits an isolated elementary school, transforming the kids into a feral swarm of mass savages. An unlikely hero must lead a motley band of teachers in the fight of their lives.



MOVIE INFO

When a cafeteria food virus turns elementary school children into killer zombies, a group of misfit teachers must band together to escape the playground carnage. The film stars Elijah Wood (The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings), Rainn Wilson ("The Office"), and Alison Pill ("The Newsroom") as teachers who fight to survive the mayhem while hilariously bickering in an uncomfortable love triangle on the worst Monday of their lives. -- (C) Lionsgate Premiere

Rating: R (for horror violence and gore, language including sexual references, and some drug use)
Genre: Horror, Comedy
In Theaters: Sep 18, 2015 Limited
Runtime: 1 hr. 36 min.
Lionsgate Premiere - Official Site


COOTIES OPENS IN MALAYSIA ON THE 24th of SEPTEMBER. TO FIND OUT WHEN YOU CAN WATCH THIS EVERYWHERE ELSE CLICK HERE

This is Clint, he used to live in New York but now he doesn't. ©Lionsgate Premiere

So here's another Zombie movie but this time, KIDS!!

Okay so it's another Zombie movie with one big difference, this time the zombies are made up entirely of kids and it happens mostly in school. So this is where I inform those of you actually reading this that SPOILERS ARE COMING. 

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

MOVIE REVIEW: SINISTER II (2015)

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From IMDB:

Following the events from the first film, a different family; a mother and her 2 sons move into a rural house that's marked for death. When the deputy from the first film learns that this family is next in line to fall to the demon Bhughul, he races before time to stop it and save them from the same fate.

Rating: R (for strong bloody violence, bloody and disturbing images, and language)
Genre: Horror
Directed By: Ciaran Foy
In Theaters: Aug 21, 2015 Wide
US Box Office: $10.6M
Runtime: 1 hr. 30 min.
Focus Features - Official Site

OPENS IN MALAYSIA ON AUGUST 27th BUT FOR THE REST OF THE WORLD CHECK HERE TO FIND OUT WHEN IT COMES TO A CINEMA NEAR YOU. 

Meet Dylan and Zach, brothers who are on the run from an abusive father and soon to be playtoy to the supernatural. ©Focus

Three years on and I almost forgot that I saw the first one... 

So yeah, Sinister II comes three years after the first one and it being a horror/thriller movie which tends to look like every other movie in the genre my memory of these sort of movies tend to get mixed-up, they sometimes sort of blend in to each other. However, that being said, I do remember Sinister a little better than the others I've seen these past couple of years. I remember it had sort of an original twist if you could call it that. Investigative journalist who was once famous for writing about a gruesome homicide stumbles on a paranormal mystery while lying to his family about why they moved to their new home. At the end they all die. Which is sort of rare in horror movies these days I believe. 

So I thought that that would be the end of that horror movie franchise even if at the very end the Boogieman or Bughuul does make an appearance at the end. Well, of course I'm wrong. The one thing about movies in the horror/thriller genre is that if it receives even the slightest praise or achieves some measure of success there's bound to be a sequel or prequel. So this one here is sort of a sequel with a prequel feel in that in this one they tell the story from the kids point of view. Why the kids? Well, if you remember in the first one it was the kids that get possessed to kill their family for Bughuul before Bughuul takes them away. 

So I've sort of given a little bit of the movie away. BUT THERE'LL BE MORE SPOILERS FROM THIS POINT ON!! 

That pale boy there is Milo head-dead-child for Bughuul's child recruitment department. He's there to evaluate Dylan on whether he's a suitable candidate. ©Focus

The movie picks up a few years after the events of the first movie. The family of Ellison Oswalt is of course dead and their son never to be found so instead we meet Ex-Deputy So & So (James Ransone), yes that's his name given on IMDB and Wikipedia and in fact I don't remember his name being mentioned throughout the movie, and now that I think about it in the first movie everyone just called him Deputy. Which seems pretty sad actually. Two movies in and his character still doesn't get a name. Anyway, he's been let off the force since he was the only one in contact with Ellison and became the main suspect soon after the family's death but was cleared when they couldn't find any evidence tying him directly with their deaths. So now Mr. Ex-Deputy is moonlighting as a Private Investigator while he digs deeper into the mystery that caused the Oswalt's death. 

Meanwhile we meet Courtney Collins (Shannyn Sossamon) and her two kids Dylan (Robert Daniel Sloan) and Zach (Dartanian Sloan) whom we meet while shopping at the supermarket, mom's looking for groceries while the kids are playing around. As mom wonders up and down the aisle she spots a man looking at her, when she passes by him again he takes a picture of her. This panics her and immediately she tells the kids to make a run for it at her signal. The man tries to spot her but fails when he's stopped by the security guard. 

This is Courtney she's running from her abusive husband and while she's doing that has taken up restoring furniture she finds in abandoned places. ©Focus

Back home and safe mom asks the kids to prepare dinner by themselves while she finishes up some work which happens to take place right next door in an abandoned church. There are no other houses near theirs. As she works in there alone she hears noises behind the old altar and goes to check it out. She finds hidden behind some cloth a brass bowl. Just then Dylan shows up to tell her that dinner is ready. Dylan stands rigid at one spot not wanting to go any further despite his mother's questions about whether he's alright or not. Just as he leaves we see what Dylan sees, the floor beginning to pool with blood. Dylan heads back to the house with his mother in tow. 

Later that night Dylan is visited by a boy ghost named Milo who takes him downstairs to view a movie off an old super8 camera. The movies are of other families who were killed by one of the families children. This happens nightly to Dylan where with each night a new child passes a reel of the film that child made during their family's murder. Milo tells him he must watch them if he doesn't want to have anymore nightmares.

We don't have a name to call this man by. Here he is trying to burn down a house and wouldn't you know it people live there. ©Focus

The next day Mr Private Investigator shows up after tracing the pattern of cases similar to the cases that Ellison Oswalt found during his investigation for his book. Cases that he himself had once brought to Ellison. His intention is to burn the house and the crime scene in order to break the pattern. But instead he finds the kids in the front and has a confrontation with Courtney. After the air clears a bit they get to talking and Courtney tells them that she and the kids moved in after her friend told her that there was no one living on the property and that hardly anyone ever comes to the place. Mr Private Investigator brilliantly deduces that she's running from her husband who is abusive. He leaves but asks whether it is okay to return the next day in order to check out the place further. 

When he returns the next day and checks out the abandoned church he too hears strange noises behind the altar and goes to check it out. He spots the brass bowl on the floor, it moves. He tosses a piece of rock at it overturning the brass bowl revealing a rat underneath. As he approaches the brass bowl the light he was using to see malfunctions. In the dark Bughuul appears startling him. Then as he looks around again he sees a silhouette or shadow of child but when he points his torch at it it disappears. While he looks he receives a call from a Dr. Stomberg (Tate Ellington) who tells him that Prof. Jonas who once helped Ellison Oswalt has gone missing. He also tells Mr P.I. that he may have found something with regards to what he's currently looking for and that they have to meet. Mr. P.I. tells him he'll come by the next day. 

Every night Milo and his dead-kid committee invite Dylan down to the basement to watch home movies they've made. How this happens every night with a mother who's afraid of her abusive husband finding them not waking up is amazing. ©Focus

As he makes his way to his car a pick-up truck and two sheriff cars show up. It's Courtney's abusive husband. He's trying to take back the kids but fails when Mr. P.I. calls their bluff on not having the right authority and the paperwork to do it. After they leave Mr. P.I. tells her that she can't leave the house immediately as it would only benefit her husband if he takes it to court. Fearing for her family's safety Courtney asks if he wouldn't mind staying the night. That evening they get to know each other and develop feelings for each other. The next morning Mr. P.I. leaves to visit Dr Stomberg. 

At Dr Stomberg's office Mr P.I. is told that the case, the mystery he's trying to uncover has a much longer history. Back decades to the days before TV a mysterious radio signal was reportedly found by ham radio operators. Rumours spread for decades about the mysterious signal but then sometime in the 90's someone somehow managed to record it. The recording began with the sound of piano keys playing a melody which is then interrupted by the sound of a child's voice followed by screaming in the background. Dr Stomberg tells him that the language spoken is Danish and that the child is heard saying, 'mother, don't scream so loud. Bughuul can't hear with you screaming.' Just as their conversation tapers off the ham radio on Dr. Stomberg's table comes on and begins to repeat the last words spoken by Mr. P.I. He immediately leaves in search of Courtney and the kids. 

Dylan isn't afraid of the ghost kids but is afraid of Bughuul and he can't tell anyone because then his family will die. Rock and a hard place. ©Focus

Meanwhile, Courtney and the kids are back at their husbands home and about to have dinner. Mr. P.I. calls but Courtney doesn't answer. Her husband walks in and picks up her phone. Mr. P.I. receives a message not to call her back. Later that evening Mr. P.I. shows up at his front door to warn him that he and his family are in serious danger but instead of concern Courtney's husband dishes out punches and kicks and threatens to kill Mr. P.I. if he returns and also threatens to hurt Courtney too. 

The next day all seems well as the family is seen outside doing what families often do when it's a lovely day out but not with this family, Zach has an Super8 camera and begins to film the family from a far with the help of the other child spirits. Dylan while sitting near his mother sneaks away her phone to send Mr. P.I. a message asking for help. Zach moves away from the camera after setting it up and is seen on camera offering drinks to everyone. 

This is Dr Stomberg who is here to replace the Professor from the last movie who's decided not to be a part of the mess. ©Focus

Later that evening Zach has managed to nail his father, mother and brother to  crosses in the middle of a corn field and placed bags over their heads. He begins shooting with the Super8 camera again and the camera shows him lighting a fire underneath his father's cross. His father goes up in flames screaming. His mother and brother begin to rouse and immediately start screaming in panic. Just as Zach begins to light a fire underneath his mother's cross Mr. P.I. shows up in his truck and knocks Zach to the ground. He rushes out of his car and starts to bring down Courtney and Dylan. The moment they're down the run towards the house. Zach comes to soon and desperate to finish the job with the urging of the other dead children he runs after them. They get lost in the field and Zach manages to catch up to Mr. P.I. where his slashes him with a sickle and cuts off two of his fingers. But in the tussle Mr. P.I. still manages to get a few kicks in and runs with Courtney and Dylan to the house.

In the house they split up. Zach enters looking for them and the dead children help him search. The search ends in the living room where Zach corners Courtney and Dylan. With one hand holding the Super8 camera and the other still holding the sickle he prepares to finish the job he started but just then Mr. P.I. shows up and smashes the camera. With the camera gone Mr. P.I. tells Zach that it's over. But Zach doesn't give up even though the dead children tell him that he's failed Bughuul and that now Bughuul will be very mad. Zach ignores the children and runs up to the attic where the dead children gave him the camera along with the other equipment, he frantically goes through the case looking for a replacement. As he busies himself looking for it Bughuul shows up and puts his hand on Zach's shoulder. Zach slowly loses his life then disappears into the screen illuminated by the Super8 projector. As soon as Zach begins to fade from the screen his mother and brother and Mr. P.I. shows up but they're too late to save him as the screen burst into flames. The house goes up in flames too. 

That's Zach Dylan's replacement after Milo decided Dylan wouldn't be a good fit with the team. He's just checking he has all his office supplies. ©Focus

Later Mr. P.I. is back at his motel room packing up his things in order to get out of town but just as he's done and heading out the door he notices on the table a ham radio. The radio suddenly turns on and a voice is heard. Bughuul makes his appearance. 

The end. (Or that's basically what happened. My writing doesn't seem like the usual does it? I'm still high on meds...)

So was this movie a suitable follow up to the so-called sleeper-hit that some say Sinister was? 

Well, the movie has been out for about a week now in the US if I'm not mistaken and the reviews out for it aren't very good. If you took the time to read the info and ratings from IMDB and Rotten Tomatoes I've helpfully put for you up there you know that it's less than favorable. As I sat there watching it though I didn't really know what people have rated this movie and I didn't bother doing any research about this movie until I got home to write it. Upon looking up the ratings for this movie I'd have to say I share the general consensus. This movie isn't very good. It isn't very bad but it's far from good. 

Let's start with the story. It's predictable after you're introduced to the main characters which is about 10 minutes into the movie. Then it gets really sort of monotonous in its pacing. It feels like it crawls from scene to scene. You don't really get much highs or lows. The only twist worth noting is the fact that just when you're thinking one kid is being brainwashed turns out they were trying to get to the other kid the whole time which after you realize this and think back about what's happened before it happens seems like the writers couldn't be bothered to think up an interesting way to do it or to come up with an interesting way to get the kid that's holding out from being brainwashed to come to the other side. 

The only cool thing about this movie is the fact that you get to see an old Super8 Camera being used. ©Focus

The horror or scary bits are the usual stuff, jump scares, shadows, somewhat graphic death scenes every time a Super8 film is shown to Dylan. You are not going to get anything new in this department either. 

The acting? Well, the kids are not at all good so you end up not caring much whether they do end up under Bughuul's spell. The ghost kids are just as bad in fact Milo the head ghost kid is sort of annoying. Shannyn Sossamon isn't too bad I guess but her accent goes in and out throughout the film. Mr. P.I. lives up to his non-specific name in being sort of neither dull nor interesting. He's there more to just make sure things come together between what happened in the first film and what's happening currently to Courtney and the kids. If he wasn't there there would be less to watch. Maybe. 

The whole premise of this franchise is that kids are influenced by Bughuul to not only kill their family but record it as well. Which makes you think what are the parents thinking when suddenly their kid has a camera they've never bought and that he's decided to make family movies by hiding in the bushes. ©Focus

All-in-all as a sequel that tries to fill in the story of Bughuul and how he influences children to kill their family it isn't all that good. Yes you do get a few fillers, a few bits of information but it doesn't help in anyway to make the last movie more interesting or to give this movie a life of its own. That combined with a story that just isn't strong enough and all you have is a pathetic attempt at cashing in on what was a somewhat interesting movie. But I guess that's the thing about the horror genre these days, there's always someone out there that'll still get their scares watching this and not really think about it beyond the scares. 

So who should watch this movie? Well, certainly somewhat who's at or above the movie's R rating of course but beyond that? Maybe for those who are deathly curious as to how Bughuul gets the kids to do his dirty deed. If you weren't curious about it back when you were done watching the first one or were quite satisfied with how that one ended then you may not want to bother with this movie. For the horror/thriller fans there isn't anything new here that you haven't seen before either in the story or in the scares. I guess if you've actually seen everything playing in the cinemas or looking to put a little scare in your date or wife maybe you can consider this but be sure that who you're going with is easily scared otherwise you won't be getting  the response you were looking for. 

Bughuul or the Boogieman only shows up when things fall apart otherwise he likes to lurk in the background doing photobombs. Also he looks like a failed The Crow cosplay.  ©Focus

So with that I'm only going to give this movie a 2.2 out 5. A halfhearted attempt at cashing in on a movie that was somewhat successful three years ago with a predictable story told in a monotonous pace with uninspiring or even at all interesting performances by all. Have a look at the trailer and decide for yourself. 



Sinister II is distributed in Malaysia by TGV Pictures so be sure to head on over to the TGV website to check out showtimes and to get your tickets.