As it is, I think A Quiet Place is a nifty little movie, more
thriller than horror in my book but really enjoyable.
For the most part it's more of a puzzle game,
than horror game and has side - stories far more compelling than the main plot.
In some cases these are more
drama than horror but none are without their share of scary monsters whether they can be seen or not.
It is not REALLY a horror story other
than the horror of the conditions at the mental hospital and how the patients are treated.
It's not
often than a horror movie becomes a critical darling, wins directing awards and pops up on various Top Ten lists across the more respected sectors of the critical community.
The movie fits more in the thriller
category than horror, even though there are some very horrific moments.
There is no terror
worse than the horror of being asked to submit a resume when you have never written one!
Do you believe it still has potential or are you worried that it is heading towards action
rather than horror?
I was about 9 when this came out and even by this point, it was more black
comedy than horror.
Capable not the best of the franchise, and was not one of the best horror films of the year, but without a doubt, I leave a good taste in the film, and I think it is
better than the horror movie Saw VII (considered for me the worst of the
It begins more sci -
fi than horror with look into a concept world (a kind of dystopia that people living in consider normal).
Nothing
less than the horror event of the year — we're that sure of it — Ari Aster's feature debut will traumatize even hard - core genre fans.
When push comes to shove, I'm more of a suspense
guy than a horror guy, but it's not always clear where one ends and the other begins.
The first thing that comes to mind in thinking about this project is that it would actually make a perfect double bill with the upcoming Platinum Dunes Ouija Board movie (which, it was recently revealed, will be more action -
adventure than horror).
It is more science
fiction than horror, less interested in chills than in recounting how this future world's various governments and societies fail to cope with a virus that turns the recently dead into mindless cannibalistic creatures that in turn infect the living.
While it may seem counterintuitive, there probably isn't a film genre (excluding movies produced by Kirk Cameron, anyway) that more consistently or explicitly references Christian ideas and iconography
than the horror genre.
With Reeves back in the spotlight, teaming up with none
other than horror maestro Eli Roth -LSB-...]
He has said in interviews that the reason he made the film was for the family dynamic that reminded him of his own (he has two young children with wife and costar Blunt), rather
than the horror elements.
He stopped at the edge of a Midwestern prairie, a thicket of tall flowers and grasses more frightening to
farmers than any horror movie madman lurking in a barn with a chain saw.
More an action
blockbuster than a horror squelcher, it contains spectacular crowd scenes that have an Hieronymus Bosch quality, but the film lacks strong meat — of the emotional and bloody zombie - cannibal sort.
It's for those who enjoy unbridled action and twisted humor more
so than horror (it's just not a very scary film in the slightest), but proves that there's still some life in the realm of the undead.
Crimson Peak reveals the first fright before the opening title, yet 15 minutes into the film this original screenplay feels more like a Jane Austin
adaptation than a horror movie, and that isn't a complaint.
Frighteningly realistic at times, with moments that will have you squirming in your seat, and if Marshall could have only had the nerve to break free from staple genre conventions, this could have been one that would please more
than horror junkies.
The R rating permits it to be far more
intense than the horror films watered for a PG - 13 rating to allow in younger viewers.
There are scenes of disturbing violence involving toasters, suicides and nosebleeds that are more
effective than some horror movies.
The condition of sleep paralysis looks
scarier than any horror movie here, in a doc that collects strikingly similar testimonies from those afflicted and recreates their terrifying dream scenarios to inexplicably creepy effect.
The three films — «The Human Centipede (First Sequence),» «The Human Centipede (Full Sequence)» and «The Human Centipede 3 (Final Sequence)» — are more gross -
out than horror, and it will take a very strong - willed individual to sit through all three.