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European Horror Movies

Black Sabbath (1963) Review

August 4, 2013 by Eric S. Leave a Comment

black sabbath reviewOriginal Title: I tre volti della paura

Synopsis: A trio of atmospheric horror tales about: A woman terrorized in her apartment by phone calls from an escaped prisoner from her past; a Russian count in the early 1800s who stumbles upon a family in the countryside trying to destroy a particularly vicious line of vampires; and a 1900-era nurse who makes a fateful decision while preparing the corpse of one of her patients – an elderly medium who died during a seance.

My review: Mario Bava’s Classic deserves to be called by its original title translation: “3 faces of fear” because the 3 segments show different genre of horror: The Giallo, a Vampire tale and a Ghost Story.

Black Sabbath starts slowly with a classic revenge story using all the code of the Giallo (leather gloves, pan and zoom shots, a slight touch of eroticism, bright red colors…) but “The Telephone” fails to create much emotion and feels more like a draft for Bava’s next masterpiece, “Blood and Black Lace”. On the other hand, you now know where “When a Stranger calls” got its inspiration from.

The second segment, “The Wurdalak” is the weakest of the bunch. Despite a good use of the sets and great cinematography, the story drags for too long and is not being helped by poor acting and a weak script.

Finally, “The drop of Water” ends this anthology on a very strong note with one of the scariest corpse/ghost ever shown on film. The face of the dead medium had probably haunted generation of moviegoers who watched this movie. For this creepy and really scary segment alone, the movie is worth a watch and deserves a place in the Horror Movies Hall of Fame.

My Rating: 6/10

Director: Mario Bava

Origin: Italy

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Filed Under: Italian Horror Movies Tagged With: anthology, Classic, Creepy, Foreign, Ghost, Scary, Supernatural

Truth Or Die (2012) Review

July 21, 2013 by Eric S. Leave a Comment

Truth-or-Die-reviewSynopsis: Young British boys and girls travel to an isolated cabin after being promised a night of heavy partying. Instead of the fun they hoped for, they meet a killer out to reap vengeance on them for the death of his brother.

Quick Review: What started as an interesting take on a classic Truth or dare game ended up being a lackluster movie, too afraid to go all the way with its own concepts.

Truth or Dare is a UK import with really good production values and subpar acting that starts on solid grounds but somehow loses its way around the 1hr mark. There is a gruesome game involving battery acid but from this point on, the script shies away from any graphic scenes and kind of goes into typical crazy-guy flick territory.

Even a “supposedly” shocking double twist can’t save the end, especially when once again the writer have decided to not go all the way with their own story concept.

More a thriller than a Horror Movie, Truth or Dare starts with a good premise but ultimately fails to deliver.

My Rating: 5/10

Director: Robert Heath

Origin: UK

Click Here to Own and Watch Truth or Die Online Now!

Filed Under: British Horror Movies Tagged With: Cabin in the Woods, revenge

Maniac (2012) Review

June 17, 2013 by Eric S. 1 Comment

Maniac-2012-reviewSynopsis: (from IMDb) The owner of a mannequin shop develops a dangerous obsession with a young artist.

My Short Review: I have to admit, I really wanted to Love this movie. Executive produced by Alexandre Aja who is one of my favorite new Master of Horror, based on one of the all-time horror movie classic, Maniac, and supervised by none other than William Lustig, the director of the original movie. Add to this the choice (at first perplexing) of Elijah Wood in the difficult role of Franck, and you can understand all the anticipation.

Sadly, as it is the case here, it can often lead to disappointment.

I love may things about the new Maniac movie: the score is brillant and kudos to Robin Coudert (Rob) for making an hypnotical soundtrack. The acting is first class and I was really impressed by Wood’s work. His voice acting was really strong and carrying so much weight without the need of seeing his face all the time. And of course the practical make up effects deliver all the gore necessary to satisfy our blood-craving (not a surprise when you know KnB are behing it).

So what’s wrong with Maniac? Its hard to tell really. Somehow the movie feels too cold; I had a hard time getting into Franck’s mind and Elijah Wood is not to blame. Was it the choice of shooting the movie using a POV angle? Maybe. We never really feel indise Franck’s head so it kinda kills the purpose of having the movie shot this way. Maybe a more traditional approach would have worked better.

Would the movie have beneficiated from Aja’s direction? Probably not as he was already very involved in the movie.

Maybe my level of expectation was too high and there was no way the movie could have delivered the way I wished it would.

In any case, Maniac is still a good Horror Movie, one of the best of this year so far. Unfortunately, there is something missing that will prevent it from becoming a cult classic like the first one did.

My Rating: 7/10

Year: 2012

Director: Frank Khalfoun

Origin: US/France

Filed Under: French Horror Movies

Atrocious Review

June 15, 2013 by Eric S. Leave a Comment

atrocious reviewSynopsis: Two teenage siblings endure a terrifying experience while investigating a rural legend near their family’s vacation home.

My Short Review:  Atrocious is another movie surfing on the success of found footage movies such as Blair Witch, Rec or Paranormal Activity. Blair Witch especially comes to mind when most of the proceedings in Atrocious are being shot at night in a creepy forest.

Nothing surprising here and the script is as thin as cigarette paper. In the hands of a more capable director, Atrocious could have risen to a very respectable entertainment. In the hands of Fernando Barreda Luna though, it’s a different story.

To make a good genre film, the viewer must be maintained in a growing sense of tension that will keep him to the edge of its seat until the final credits. He must as well feel emotionally involved with the characters and their misadventures.  To do this, you need two things: a suffocating cinematography spreading doubt and fear, and talented actors to make every emotional step credible.

Unfortunately, in Atrocious none of that is present on the screen. The actors are not conveying any sense of fear and emotion while the cinematography is just bland.
The result is a genre film clearly built to cash in on a lucrative trend. A Movie with a total lack of originality or genuine scares.

My Rating: 4/10

Year: 2010

Director: Fernando Barreda Luna

Origin: Spain

Filed Under: Spanish Horror Movies Tagged With: Foreign, found footage

Trollhunter Review

June 13, 2013 by Eric S. Leave a Comment

Trollhunter reviewSynopsis: (from IMDb) A group of students investigates a series of mysterious bear killings, but learns that there are much more dangerous things going on. They start to follow a mysterious hunter, learning that he is actually a troll hunter.

My Short Review: While I do believe TrollHunter is a bit overrated, it is still one of the better entry in the Found Footage genre. At times, the movie reminded me of Cloverfield, other times Blair Witch (during scenes in the forest) but Trollhunter adopts a funnier tone than those 2 movies. I would actually not put it in the horror category but more in the Fantasy/Adventure ones.

First of all, the design of the Trolls are very fantasy-like (they are Trolls after all) and never really feel like scary creature. Actually, we kinda feel for them as they are being killed and you can tell Hans, the Troll hunter has respect for them and remorse (especially after the massacre he was part of in the 70s).

There is also plenty of humour with Christian references, Troll “scent”, government cover-ups (gotta love the fake bear traces…).

As a result, Trollhunter is an enjoyable mix that do not always work (some scenes are a bit overplayed and the movie would have beneficiated from 15mn less running time) but I really commend the filmmakers for taking a completely new approach to the genre. Not a great movie but a refreshing one.

My Rating: 6/10

Original Title: Trolljegeren

Year: 2010

Origin: Norway

Director: André Øvredal

Click Here To Own and Watch TrollHunter Now!

Filed Under: European Horror Movies Tagged With: Foreign, found footage, Monsters

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