A: Picture that scene
in old horror movies where a mad scientist holds up a bubbling beaker full of some strange toxic brew.
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There's a certain charm to watching
scratchy old horror movies on Halloween, but when the going gets weird you got ta go Blu - ray.
Writer / director Scott Derrickson (The Exorcism of Emily Rose, The Day the Earth Stood Still) has a touch for
using old horror movie tools to create new scares, and he also incorporates several interesting themes into Sinister.
He never really took to suburbia, where he was raised, and instead of joining little league or selling lemonade spent his time drawing,
watching old horror movies, and reading the works of Edgar Allan Poe.
The twist of the film pretty much covers up nearly every bad decision made throughout horror movie history and even gives us several references to some of
our old horror movie favourites.
The film keeps you at the edge of your seat; director Jonathan Kaplan does a credible job building the tension, never stooping to cheap false thrills — except in the finale, which predictably utilizes perhaps
the oldest horror movie cliché, but it is a logical and undeniably entertaining conclusion.
There's the suspicion that Penner (adapting a short story by Robert Damon Schneck) and director Stacy Title are simply assembling ideas and images that they have seen in other horror movies, hoping that we have been so inundated with certain clichés that we'll just look at this as another, regular -
old horror movie — not the on - the - cheap job that it obviously is.
The pixelation to the graphics makes everything grittier and that much closer to
the old horror movie poster - style illustrations that obviously served as inspiration for the game's aesthetic.