| Review Date: Director: Brad Anderson Writer: Brad Anderson, Stephen Gevedon Producers: Dorothy Aufiero, David Collins Actors: David Caruso as Phil Peter Mullan as Gordon Stephen Gevedon as Mike |
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If you feel like watching a movie that moves very slowly, gives you a handful of characters with divergent backgrounds, tosses a few very ambiguous and supernatural cookies your way and is extremely disturbing once you put it all together, well, then this movie is definitely for you! It’s the kind of film that you actually have to see twice to fully appreciate (damn, I missed that whole “peanut butter” thing!) and one that will likely creep the shit out of you if watched alone in the dark. “Brrrrrrrrr…now what was that sound in the basement? Honey, can you go check?” And one thing this film doesn’t have, unlike its Hollywood-ian counterparts like THE HAUNTING, is special effects. In fact, that’s one of the greater things about this movie: it feels real because it looks like it’s actually taped on video with very credible actors in very credible circumstances (I did some research and it was, in fact, shot on digital video…ah-ha!). Another great thing about it is that it’s actually very gory and somewhat violent in theme, and yet we rarely see anything of the sort on the big screen (it’s mostly implied, kids!). And as clichéd as it might be to say…it’s usually much scarier when stuff is left to our imagination or implied in movies as such.
Other films that this one reminded me of include HENRY: PORTRAIT OF A SERIAL KILLER and THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT, with that same real sense of dread, brooding and terror. The film does however move awfully slow and if you really don’t get “into” it completely (you really need to concentrate here), you will lose the motion of the story and the pent-up tension might be released. But overall, this film is yet another great example of the horror genre making a very cool comeback this year with no tight tanktops in sight. And with David Caruso acting like the king hotshot like only he can, how can you go wrong? Definitely not a film for everyone but a must-see for anyone looking to throw themselves into the psyche of the disturbed (count me in!). Stanley Kubrick would be proud! Oh yeah…so where’s that gun again…?