Not exact matches
This film is actually terrible — I mean, yeah — it is
scary in the sense that its creepy, but I think, really, the film is just the byproduct
of global DVD residuals from the directors father — allowing Panatos to string together a series
of overproduced, overgrained interior sequences, cheap synth score and a slasher
movie ending, and trying to pass it off as a «cult
movie», when really we, the audience, need to know who, what or where the protagonist is coming from, what her dramatic need is, who she interacts with, and so on.
The fun but deadly storyline is a cross between
Scary Movie and Groundhog Day, and the maze
of thrills will have you spooked out until the very
end.
«When high school beauty Ashley (DeJonge) arrives to babysit precocious 12 - year - old Luke (Levi Miller, Jasper Jones) it's the usual routine
of ordering pizza and watching a
scary movie, but that is where any semblance
of normality
ends.
Ranked on numerous lists as having one
of the
scariest climaxes in
movie history, the true horror is not in Wait Until Dark's
ending, but the story itself.
Tagged as: 2011 Sundance Film Festival, A Week
of News, Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, andrew stanton, Audrey Tatou, Banksy, Battle Angel, Bond 23, Brides Maids, Cameron Diaz, Chewitel Ejiofor, Dallas, Dark Shadows, Elektra Luxx, Elton John,
Ender's Game, Eva Green, Everything Must Go, Exit Through the Gift Shop, Fletch, Gambit, Godzilla, Golden Globes, Henry Cavill, Jack McBrayer, Jackie Earle Haley, James Bond, James Cameron, Jason Segel, Javier Bardem, Jim Caviezel, Joaquin Pheonix, John Barry, John Carpenter from Mars, Jordana Brewster, Joseph Gordon - Levitt, Julia Roberts, Katherine Heigl, kevin smith, Kodi Smit - McPhee, La Delicatesse, New Year's Eve, Nicolas Cage, Pariah, Peep World, Pet Semetary, R.I.P.D., ralph fiennes, Ricky Gervais, SAG Awards, Savannah, Scarlett Johansson,
Scary Movie 5, Scream 4, Sleep Tight, Snow White, Superman, The Beginners, The Congress, The Dark Knight Rises, The Killer, The King's Speech, The Stand, TNT, Tom Hooper, Treasure
of Pompeii, Uncharted, Undercover Cop, Win Win, Winter's Tale, Zach Galafinakis
OPENING THIS WEEK Kam's Kapsules: Weekly Previews That Make Choosing a Film Fun by Kam Williams For
movies opening March 5, 2010 BIG BUDGET FILMS Alice in Wonderland (PG for fantasy, action, violence,
scary images and smoking) Tim Burton directs this animated sequel to the Lewis Carroll children's classic revolving around now 19 year - old Alice's (Mia Wasikowska) return to the whimsical kingdom for a reunion with the White Rabbit (Michael Sheen) and other childhood friends, and to
end the Red Queen's (Helena Bonham Carter) reign
of terror.
Jimmy has been in prison for the last several years, and when our
movie opens, it still opens with Eli finding this weapon, but it becomes this family drama, this brother's redemption story as this weapon gets Jimmy and Eli into some hot water that they did not anticipate, and they
end up being on the run and on the road from some really
scary dudes, both
of our world and perhaps beyond.
Struggling to adjust to the show's abrupt
end, he begins to see Brigsby's lessons as his only way to make sense
of a big,
scary new world, and James decides to make a
movie to
end Brigsby's story — and re-begin his own.
Get Out is a brilliant satire on race and the gruesome twist
ending of post-Obama America which functions also as a
scary movie, black comedy and an acting masterclass from its four leads.
However, the problem is that screenwriter Craig Mazin has something
of a track record, when it comes to crafting comedies that can not sustain their high - concepts and
end up repeating the same (unfunny) jokes over and over (see:
Scary Movie 4, Superhero
Movie, The Hangover Part II).
It's
scary to think
of what will happen to the Malligators that
end up in the wrong hands, thanks to this
movie.