I was shocked to learn this after waking up looking like
I belonged in a horror movie.
The movie gets pretty boring in some scenes, and a lot of the scenes with violence seem to
belong in a horror movie, which is what the director is usually known for.
Not exact matches
It's a shock / jump moment that allows McAdams to simultaneously show relief and
horror, but it
belongs in a Seth McFarlane
movie or TV show (it would be perfectly at home on Family Guy, for instance).
Surprisingly, of all of the King adaptations, that 1986 film — which featured young characters on a journey to find a dead body — feels the most similar to this one despite the fact that this
movie belongs in the
horror genre.
The
movie vacillates between shots that
belong to comedy — conventional over-the-shoulder shots that let you feel like you're
in on the conversational joke — and shots that
belong to
horror — empty patches of screen that make you feel like someone could jump out at any moment.