Nedavno sam već okačio
listu gomile zaista primamljivo-zvučećih novih nehorora koji se mogu očekivati ove godine: tu listu imate OVDE.
E pa sada, u okviru akcije
proslave Petka 13-og, kucnuo je čas da najzad okačim i listu najočekivanijih HORORA 2015. godine. Kao
što ćete videti, postoje jake šanse da se najzad ove godine razbije
"Prokletstvo trojke" i da konačno dobijemo i neki horor koji možda
dobaci čak i do ocene 4- ako ne i
više!
Takođe, ukoliko pratite
belosvetske horor sajtove, videćete da na mojoj listi nema treša i
mediokritetstva kakve oni hajpuju na svojim most-expected listama (zato što su
studio bitches, pa pedluju samo komercijalno američko đubre i/ili zato što
nemaju ukusa i za bolje ne znaju). Umesto rimejka Poltergajsta (da vam
otkrijem tajnu? biće to sranje!) i nastavka Konjuringa itsl.
budalaština kakvima ne želim da se bavim, samo ovde ćete ekskluzivno naći
izlistanu gomilu filmova za koje na takvim žanr-idiotskim mestima niste čuli,
niti ste mogli da čujete, jer radi se mahom o opskurnim, evropskim, azijskim
ili nezavisnim američkim produkcijama sa artističkim ambicijama.
Naslovi su izlistani po
redosledu visine mojih očekivanja.
Nekolicinu sam čak uspeo da
pogledam u međuvremenu, otkad sam ovu listu skockao, ali ostavio sam ih ovde
zarad čitalaca koji ih još nisu pogledali (jer nisu dostupni na netu; ja sam ih
gledao nekim privilegovanim putevima pa mi zato nemojte tražiti linkove, jer
oni ne postoje).
The Witch
Robert Eggers’ The
Witch is a Colonial New England
horror film. A production designer and filmmaker, Eggers authentically
recreates the setting in the film, which seems to herald the best kind of
horror movie: a stark, eerie,
witchy period chiller.
A fiercely committed
ensemble and an exquisite sense of
historical detail conspire to cast a
highly atmospheric spell in “The Witch,” a strikingly achieved tale of a mid-17th-century New England family’s
steady descent into religious hysteria
and madness.
Laying an imaginative foundation for the 1692 Salem witchcraft
trials that would follow decades later, writer-director Robert Eggers’ impressive debut feature walks a tricky
line between disquieting ambiguity and
full-bore supernatural horror, but leaves no doubt about the dangerously
oppressive hold that Christianity exerted on some dark corners of the Puritan
psyche. With its formal, stylized diction and austere approach to genre, this accomplished feat of low-budget
period filmmaking clearly marks Eggers as a
storyteller of unusual rigor and ambition.
Goodnight
Mommy
A fairy tale
for “Dogtooth” enthusiasts, Veronika Franz and Severin Fiala’s “Goodnight Mommy”
takes place in an austere, isolated Austrian home, where twin boys begin to suspect that something is wrong with their mother.
But that’s only the beginning of this family’s
dysfunction, as tension escalates to torture
in the duo’s elegantly stylized, thoroughly
unnerving attempt to creep the heck out of arthouse horror fans. The
project, which recalls such child-centric chillers as “I’m Not Scared” and “The
Orphanage,” was backed by fest vet Ulrich
Seidl (for whom Franz co-wrote several pics), allowing it to court both genre
and auteur fests.
=== Ovo sam
uspeo da pogledam, a vi svakako iskoristite priliku na FESTu! Odličan film, na
granici 3+ / 4-. Rivju coming soon.===
Nicolas Winding Refn's Neon Demon
In a female-driven horror
film, Elle Fanning will play an aspiring model who is caught in a world of
beauty and demise.
Keanu Reeves and Christina
Hendricks will star in the film, which revolves around a young queen
bee (played by Abbey Lee / Drive) who metaphorically, and
possibly literally, sucks the blood out of the girls in her social sphere. Elle
Fanning is the lead, a young girl who gets pulled into Lee’s character’s sway,
but no word on who Reeves and Hendricks would play. Jena Malone (“The Hunger
Games: Mockingjay Part 1″) and Bella Heathcote (“Dark Shadows”) round out
the eclectic cast of up-and-coming actresses.
It Follows
David Robert Mitchell’s
first film, The Myth of the American Sleepover, was a gentle drama
interweaving character stories like Dazed and Confused. His “follow” up It
Follows focuses on one group of characters with a similar tone, and a
horrific twist. Jay finds herself cursed
by a spirit that follows her wherever she goes. It’s slow, but persistent, and her friends can’t see it but they still
try to help battle this invisible force. Like Myth, it’s still a story of
friends hanging out but now it’s to watch each other’s backs as the following
spirit spreads. The horror strikes the
right balance of graphic and subtle.
Spring
If Richard Linklater
attempted a remake of Val Lewton’s “Cat
People” the end result might resemble “Spring,” an intriguing oddity about
an attractive couple who meet in a scenic European locale and quickly chat
their way into a close bond, but find their ties tested by the young woman’s
propensity for periodically moonlighting as a fantastical monster.
Co-directors Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead
(Resolution), working from a script
credited to Benson, do a clever job of entwining elements of budding romance, mounting dread and
indolent vacation in their leisurely paced, handsomely produced indie feature.
Horsehead
Jessica returns home for
her grandmother’s funeral and has to sleep in a room next to the body. She’s a
pretty good sport about it, but it gives her nightmares full of beautiful horrific imagery, sometimes erotically horrific. The nightmares
ultimately reveal family secrets,
and it’s well acted and told, but really the plot is just filler between the awesome images.
=== Možda ću
pisati za RUE MORGUE o ovome, pa ću ga pogledati ranije.===
Shinya Tsukamoto's Fires on the Plain
War is horror (and splatter).
There are horrors-of-war
movies (“Come and See”), and then there are World War II horror movies (“Dead
Snow”), and judging by “Fires on the Plain,” it’s not entirely clear whether
Japanese splatter director Shinya Tsukamoto understands the
difference. The “Tetsuo: The Iron Man” helmer claims to have long dreamed of
filming Shohei Ooka’s 1951 novel, already adapted far more artfully by Kon
Ichikawa, but he seems to be deriving a
bit too much pleasure from all those decapitated heads, stacked corpses and
maggot-infested flesh wounds to treat the pic’s anti-war message seriously.
Despite the credibility a Venice
competition slot imparts, “Fires” feels more
giallo than arthouse.
The Falling
The set up for this one
makes it sound like Heavenly Creatures
crossed with Picnic at Hanging Rock. Set at an English girls’ school in
1969, the film stars Game of Thrones’ Maisie
Williams as a troubled teen who falls ill with a mysterious illness that
is then somehow passed onto her fellow classmates. Hysteria and tragedy
follows, but The Falling is more
concerned with atmosphere and emotion
than it is with guts and gore, making for what will hopefully be a fascinating
and thought-provoking psychological
drama.
Rob Zombie's 31
A group of people are
kidnapped in the days leading up to Halloween and are forced to try survive
during a game called 31 where they are hunted
by a gang of evil clowns.
Cub
Over-imaginative 12 year-old Sam heads off to the woods to summer scout camp with his pack convinced he will encounter a monster... and he does. He claims to have seen “Kai,” the mythical werewolf-boy the counselors have been scaring their charges with stories about. Once again camping in the woods proves a great way to get killed in “Cub,” which puts a number of Belgian boy scouts and their leaders in harm’s way just over the French border. Jonas Govaerts’ first feature is a pastiche of familiar horror elements that’s well crafted throughout, but falls prey to the common dilemma of finding a payoff worthy of the buildup. In that respect it ultimately disappoints, but it’s still a promisingly assured debut. After an hour of effective buildup that nicely juggles suspense, humor and homage, all hell breaks loose. But while the now-gory action is well handled, the mysteries and relationships the script had seemed to be carefully tending are simply abandoned.
30
Europa Report writer Philip
Gelatt will adapt and direct a feature based on Laird Barron’s short story "30", the tale of two wildlife biologists, isolated on
land once occupied by a Manson-style thrill-kill cult, struggling to find the
cause of bizarre animal activity in the
region. As their relationship deteriorates, and discoveries mount, they’re
besieged by strange forces that seem to come from the very land itself.
Child 44
Based on Tom Rob Smith's
first novel in a trilogy, the story unfolds as a disgraced military police
officer (Tom Hardy looking ragged
and sporting a wicked Russian accent) investigates a number of child murders by a suspected serial
killer. The big twist here is that the investigation takes place in the Soviet Union during Stalin's leadership.
The concept may well be familiar but the setting and period certainly add some unexpected intrigue to the story, not to mention a political element that usually doesn't play a part in your standard serial killer hunt movie. And then there's this cast. Aside from Hardy, the movie also stars Noomi Rapace, Gary Oldman, Joel Kinnaman, Charles Dance, Jason Clarke, Vincent Cassel and Paddy Considine.
The concept may well be familiar but the setting and period certainly add some unexpected intrigue to the story, not to mention a political element that usually doesn't play a part in your standard serial killer hunt movie. And then there's this cast. Aside from Hardy, the movie also stars Noomi Rapace, Gary Oldman, Joel Kinnaman, Charles Dance, Jason Clarke, Vincent Cassel and Paddy Considine.
Takashi Miike's As the Gods Will
Guaranteed to delight those
with a hankering for deathmatch-survival mangas (far more “Battle Royale” than “The Hunger
Games”), “As the Gods Will” finds the Japanese gore-meister returning to high school, where classic toys come alive to play lethal
games with students. There’s a confused sci-fi element and a perfunctory
nod to society’s benumbed attitude toward violence, but really, the pic is just
an excuse for more splatter from a
director who, as always, knows his target audience.
Somnia
Hot on the heels of one of
2014’s best new horror releases ‘Oculus’, director Mike Flanagan has wasted no
time getting back in the saddle with what promises to be another atmospheric chiller, this time about a child whose nightmares come to life.
Kate Bosworth and Tom Jane star.
The Hallow
This UK production, the
directorial debut of Corin Hardy, immediately became of wide interest when
Hardy landed the job of directing the upcoming reboot of ‘The Crow’ (at the
recommendation of Edgar Wright, no less). Centring on a family under attack from demonic beings in the woods beside their
home.
It takes time for “The
Hallow” to get rolling, but once it reaches a bang-up final act, genre fans
could walk out clamoring for a sequel. The directorial debut of visual
artist Corin Hardy is never less than arresting to the eye, but thin
characters and a familiar story hold this Irish chiller back from entering
the top tier of recent horror entries. Fortunately, the human characters
ultimately don’t matter nearly as much as the diabolical beings they
encounter. With Bojana Novakovic.
Some Kind of
Hate
A hard-edged supernatural
slasher. A Nightmare on Elm Street-styled
paranormal slasher movie, approached
like an emotionally intense indie drama.
About an enraged 17 year old girl who died as the result of high school
bullying and who has returned on a revenge
bender.
Shrew's Nest
(Musarañas)
Spain, 1950s. Montse's
agoraphobia keeps her locked in a sinister apartment in Madrid and her only
link to reality is the little sister she lost her youth raising. But one day, a
reckless young neighbor, Carlos, falls down the stairwell and drags himself to
their door. Someone has entered the shrew's nest... perhaps he'll never leave.
Creep
When a videographer answers
a Craigslist ad for a one-day job in a remote mountain town, he finds his
client is not at all what he initially seems. A slow-burning found-footage
suspenser with some mildly clever twists
and a knockout payoff. But any genre fan who’s able to catch this
sporadically unsettling indie with a festival or theatrical audience probably
should jump at the chance to do so, if only to savor the jolt of shared frisson
each time a methodical build-up leads to a nasty surprise. The overall game
plan recalls the “Paranormal Activity” series — not surprisingly,
considering Jason Blum, producer of that franchise, signed on for this
project as well.
Wolf
Mustata leaves unclear
what’s actually happening and what’s inside the mind of Lupu, a
16-year-old struggling with the usual hormonal
urges. He’s got eyes for Clara, a vixenish flirt whose interests lie
elsewhere. Added to the mix, his father’s death just over two years earlier
still hits him hard, and now his mother is seeing another guy. The hallucinatory, contradictory musings of
a young man’s mind are the jumping-off point for Bogdan Mustata’s
intriguing debut, “Wolf,” a mood piece
of intermittent potency that still manages to get under the skin. Made with
assistance from a dream team of workshops and funds — Sundance Institute,
Cannes Cinefondation Atelier and Torino Film Lab — the pic is the antithesis of Romanian realism in
the way it plays with levels of reality, weaving in and out of the teen’s
active, haunted imagination. Consciously Nouvelle Vague at times, with echoes of Polanski and Bertolucci,
“Wolf” will prowl around fest sidebars.
Midnight Special
Jeff Nichols (director of Take Shelter, Mud) a Firestarter-ish sounding story about a father taking his supernaturally powered young son on the run. The father is Michael Shannon. Also starring Kirsten Dunst, Adam Driver and Joel Edgerton. A kind of tribute to 1980's John Carpenter films.
Flesh of My
Flesh
In Denis Dercourt’s
oddly sparse “Flesh of My Flesh” a
spaced-out blonde lures, kills and chops up men to feed her ailing 6-year-old
daughter. Though the gruesome plot fills the bill, genre-wise, “Flesh”
often seems like an empty stylistic exercise instead of
a horror film. The more Dercourt busily deploys different lenses to
produce shifting out-of-focus patches within the frame, the more the absence of
backstory to explain what’s lurking behind the heroine’s blank eyes feels like
gratuitous omission. Though the pic may initially draw cannibal-happy auds, its
arty affects and infrequent blood
splatters make for a meager menu.
Another
Jason Bognacki's Another reimagines the witchy weirdness of Dario Argento's
classic Suspiria (1977) while further fragmenting its own
coming-of-age narrative into a fever
dream of spatio-temporal ruptures and hyper-stylised imagery.
From the very first frame, it
sets a dark mood and an atmosphere
fraught with tension. When you start your movie with a bunch of creepy dudes in
black robes performing some sort of occult
ritual on a baby in a cave, this sort of thing is bound to happen.
At its best, “Another” is
an artistic rendering of that classic pulpy giallo style, with a healthy dose
of old Hammer horror thrown in for good measure. It will call to mind the work
of filmmakers like Mario Bava, Dario
Argento, Lucio Fulci, and all the other Italian genre innovators.
Bagnacki’s color palate and the filters he uses make every frame look and feel
like paintings.
Greatful Dead
Eiji Uchida’s “Greatful
Dead” is one of the year’s craziest,
darkest, and most weirdly moving films. Revolving around a young woman with a penchant for stalking
loners, it starts off like a fairly typical quirky comedy, before hurtling
headlong into unpredictable perversion
and homicide, marrying extreme content with dark comedy and a social conscience. Anchored by an amazing and
incredibly brave performance from young up and coming actress Kumi Takiuchi,
it’s a unique film.
=== Ovo može
da se skine. Pogledao sam, lepa trojka, vredi pažnje. ===
Cooties
A zombie
movie about kids who become infected with a virus and turn into
bloodthirsty monsters. It’s teachers versus students. Elijah Wood and Rainn
Wilson play teachers less concerned with inspiring young minds than keeping
their own brains uneaten. A schoolyard full of anklebiters develops a genuine
taste for flesh in “Cooties,” an irreverent, off-color zom-com that seizes on the scourge of playgrounds everywhere when a
spontaneous outbreak of brain-rotting,
cannibalism-inducing germs erupts within a small-town elementary school.
Told from the teachers’ p.o.v., this tongue-in-cheek
midnight movie feels wrong in so many ways, asking a handful of
irresponsible adults to bash and bludgeon their way through foaming packs of infected kids in order to save
themselves.
Joe Dante's Burying the Ex
Horror Comedy stars Anton Yelchin (“Star Trek”), Ashley Greene (“Twilight”) and Alexandra Daddario (“True Detective”). Written
by Alan Trezza, “Burying the Ex” follows nice guy Max (Yelchin) and
his overbearing but incredibly beautiful girlfriend Evelyn (Greene). Their
relationship takes a nosedive after they decide to move in together and Evelyn
turns out to be a controlling, manipulative nightmare. Max realizes it’s time
to call it quits, but there’s just one problem: he’s too afraid to break up
with her. Fate steps in when Evelyn is involved in a freak accident and
dies, leaving Max single and ready to mingle. Several weeks later, he has
a chance encounter with Olivia (Daddario), a cute and spirited girl who just
might be his soulmate. But that same night, Evelyn returns from the
grave as a dirt-smeared zombie and she’s
determined to live happily ever after with Max.
A Girl Walks
Home Alone at Night
“Middle Eastern feminist vampire romance” is likely to remain an
underpopulated cinematic subgenre, but at least it now has a luminous
standard-bearer in “A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night.” A sly, slinky creeper set in an imaginary Iranian underworld — appropriately realized in glistening black and
white — U.S.-based writer-director Ana Lily Amirpour’s auspicious debut
feature spices its genre stew with elements of Lynchian neo-noir and even spaghetti Western, but the film’s
pointed, contemporary gender politics
are very much its own.
Phantasm:
Ravager
Director: David
Hartman
Writers: Don
Coscarelli, David Hartman
The final installment of
the long running Phantasm series stars A. Michael Baldwin, Reggie
Bannister and Angus Scrimm.
The film follows the continued exploits of
brothers Mike and Jody along with family friend Reggie as they continue to
battle the Tall Man, a supernatural
undertaker from another dimension.
The Voices
Ryan Reynolds does his best
Norman Bates in a serial-killer satire
posing as romantic-comedy fluff.
Cat goes, “Kill!” Dog goes,
“Don’t!” But there’s one sound no one knows, and that’s the sound of laughter
at Marjane Satrapi’s “The Voices.” An off-kilter
black comedy about a seriously disturbed schizophrenic who speaks to his
pets — and whose pets respond with unsolicited feedback about his new
serial-killer hobby — this unnatural genre-bender serves as a bizarre vessel
for the “Persepolis” co-director to expand her live-action chops. Never cute
but occasionally clever, the result
recalls a certain strain of fantasy-hued Sundance selections such as “Lars and
the Real Girl” or “The Young Poisoner’s Handbook”.
=== Procurio
na net. Eh, slabo je to, ipak: na granici 2+ i 3- Igraće i na FEST-u===
Guillermo del Toro's Crimson Peak
In the aftermath of a
family tragedy, an aspiring author is torn between love for her childhood
friend and the temptation of a mysterious outsider. Trying to escape the ghosts
of her past, she is swept away to a
house that breathes, bleeds...and remembers. Jessica Chastain is joined on screen by Mia Wasikowska, Charlie Hunnam and Tom Hiddleston
The Editor
Devoted fans of the
Italian giallo genre — those
hybrid murder-mystery/horror mellers that flourished from the mid-’60s to the
mid-’80s — will get a hoot out of the precision with which
“The Editor” satirizes their
clumsier conventions. Winnipeg collective Astron-6’s prior features
“Manborg” and “Father’s Day” were equally insular homages-cum-spoofs. Less
laugh-out-loud funny than those predecessors even for those in the know, this
overlong homage will delight serious horror geeks
Wyrmwood
It is a miracle that the Australian zombie action movie shot
over four years is coherent, let alone energetic and thrilling. Kiah and Tristan Roache-Turner have a few
inventive twists on the zombie genre,
notably using zombies as fuel and also having one character able to control
zombies, like a zombie Aquaman. There’s a great scene where the main characters
all learn the new rules of the zombie world. The Walking Dead quality makeup also
elevates Wyrmwood above the slew of cheap zombie knockoffs, although
it is unfortunate the heroine spends most of the movie tied up in a lab and the
Sam Raimi camera angles are paying a little more than homage.
=== Ovo je danas procurilo na net!===
=== Ovo je danas procurilo na net!===
We Are Still
Here
The horror title follows
the buyers of a New England home, a domicile that takes a sacrifice every 30
years or so. They heard that the house was an old funeral parlor, but decided
to move in anyway. Not to mention, the original owner use to ship the dead
bodies to Boston’s Chinatown where they were ground up for Chop Suey. The
film is directed by Ted Geoghegan and stars such genre thesps as Barbara
Crampton (Re-Animator), Lisa
Marie from Tim Burton’s Ed Wood, Sleepy
Hollow and Mars Attacks! and
a pissed-off burnt looking monster who likes to sit in the back of cars and gut
pretty women while they’re driving.
Bone Tomahawk
Bearded Kurt Russell takes on some cave-dwelling cannibals in the old west.
6 Miranda
Drive
A horror flick from Wolf Creek's Greg Mclean. Kevin Bacon and family go on a trip to
the Grand Canyon and apparently bring some supernatural
presence back home with them.
Jacqueline
Ess
Jovanka Vuckovic does vintage Clive Barker.
XX
Female horror
anthology,
with segments by Karyn Kusama
(Jennifer’s Body), alongside directors Mary
Harron, Jennifer Lynch and Jovanka Vuckovic.
The Profane
Exhibit
Horror anthology, with
segments by Jeremy Kasten, Uwe Boll (segment "Basement"), Ruggero Deodato (segment
"Bridge"), Anthony DiBlasi (segment "Mother May I"), Marian
Dora (segment "Mors in Tabula"), Andrey Iskanov (segment
"Tochka"), José Mojica Marins
(segment "Viral"), Ryan Nicholson (segment "Goodwife"), Yoshihiro Nishimura (segment "The
Hell Chef"), Michael Todd Schneider (segment "Manna"), Richard Stanley (segment
"Coltan"), Sergio Stivaletti (segment "Tophet Quorom"), Nacho Vigalondo (segment "Sins of
the Father").
Tales Of
Halloween
Horror anthology, with
segments by Darren Lynn Bousman, Axelle
Carolyn, Adam Gierasch, Andrew Kasch, Neil
Marshall, Lucky McKee, Mike Mendez, Dave Parker, Ryan Schifrin, John Skipp, Paul Solet
Norway
Norway is a Greek Only Lovers Left Alive but instead of brooding, the
vampire dances. Zano is a vampire who
has to keep dancing. He explains why, but still seems like one of those
A-holes who just can’t sit still, except Zano is actually compelling when he
moves. In Greece in 1984, Zano
follows a couple out of a dance club on a journey that climaxes in a crazily
satisfying third act.
Scouts vs.
Zombies
A
coming-of-age zombie movie, this horror-comedy
stars Tye Sheridan, Logan Miller and
Joey Morgan as scouts who must save their town after an outbreak of zombies.
Christopher Landon (Paramormal Activity: The Marked Ones) directs.
The Corpse of Anna Fritz
Director: Hèctor Hernández Vicens
Anna Fritz, a famous and beautiful actress, has died recently. Three young men sneak into the morgue to see her naked. Fascinated by her beauty, they decide to become the last people to have sex with her.
Anna Fritz, a famous and beautiful actress, has died recently. Three young men sneak into the morgue to see her naked. Fascinated by her beauty, they decide to become the last people to have sex with her.
Deathgasm
Director/Screenwriter: Jason Lei Howden
New kid in town Brodie and bad-boy Zakk quickly bond over their mutual admiration of heavy metal. But when these two metal thrashing losers unwittingly summon malevolent forces, their dreams of stardom may just have to be put on hold.
New kid in town Brodie and bad-boy Zakk quickly bond over their mutual admiration of heavy metal. But when these two metal thrashing losers unwittingly summon malevolent forces, their dreams of stardom may just have to be put on hold.
The Diabolical
Director: Alistair Legrand
When a single mother and her two young children are tormented by an increasingly strange and intense presence, she turns to her science teacher boyfriend to help take on the violent forces that paranormal experts are too frightening to face. Cast: Ali Larter,
Director: Alistair Legrand
When a single mother and her two young children are tormented by an increasingly strange and intense presence, she turns to her science teacher boyfriend to help take on the violent forces that paranormal experts are too frightening to face. Cast: Ali Larter,
Victor
Frankenstein
Cast: James McAvoy, Daniel Radcliffe. Told from the perspective of Igor, played by Radcliffe.
Eli Roth’s The Green Inferno
Davno završeni pa sklonjeni
omaž Kanibal holokaustu moraće ove
godine izaći pred narod, makar i samo na DVD.
México
Bárbaro
A Mexican Horror Anthology
German Angst
German horror
anthology,
with segments by Jörg Buttgereit,
Michal Kosakowski and Andreas Marschall.
Krampus
By Michael Dougherty (Trick ‘r Treat). Scheduled for release
next holiday season and teased with greeting cards just
recently, Krampus is Dougherty’s horror-comedy
vision of the Germanic Christmas folk
beast.
Takashi Miike's Over Your Dead Body
Its potentially good idea— actors rehearsing the classic supernatural tale “Yotsuya kaidan” find their roles spilling into real life — never sparks, and so the film registers as just a handsome, rather tedious formal exercise. Most of “Over Your Dead Body” consists of those rehearsal scenes, which, despite their striking theatrical production design, merely retell a much-told tale in competent fashion. Of course, art eventually imitates life in a late-breaking flood of gory horror, some of it possibly dreamt or hallucinated by the latter-day Casanova.
Pic remains enervated and uninvolving, however, this over-the-top nastiness carrying none of
the charge that worst-scenario violence did after an even longer, slower
buildup in Miike’s best-known horror opus, “Audition.” Nor does it sport the
glee of his more campily exploitative exercises in outre violence.
M. Night Shyamalan's The Visit
This story is about a
family's trip to visit their grandmother gone wrong
Maggie
Arnold
Schwarzenegger in a dramatic zombie movie
about the dad of a teenage girl (Abigail Breslin) who gets infected with a
virus that slowly changes her into a zombie.
Excess Flesh
Director: Patrick Kennelly
Director: Patrick Kennelly
Obsessed with her sexy roommate, Jill violently
imprisons Jennifer in their apartment in a twisted attempt to bring them closer
together. Cast: Bethany Orr, Mary Loveless,
Hangman
Director: Adam Mason
Returning from vacation, the Miller family find their home has been broken into. After cleaning up the mess they continue with their lives, shaking off the feeling of being violated. But little do they know the nightmare has just begun. Cast: Jeremy Sisto
Director: Adam Mason
Returning from vacation, the Miller family find their home has been broken into. After cleaning up the mess they continue with their lives, shaking off the feeling of being violated. But little do they know the nightmare has just begun. Cast: Jeremy Sisto
He Never Died
Director/Screenwriter: Jason Krawczyk
Jack is a man battling his eternal struggle with cannibalism. There are very few reasons to live when you can't die. Cast: Henry Rollins
Director/Screenwriter: Jason Krawczyk
Jack is a man battling his eternal struggle with cannibalism. There are very few reasons to live when you can't die. Cast: Henry Rollins
The Invitation
Director: Karyn Kusama,
While attending a dinner party at his former home, a man thinks his ex-wife and her new husband have sinister intention for their guests.
Director: Karyn Kusama,
While attending a dinner party at his former home, a man thinks his ex-wife and her new husband have sinister intention for their guests.
Pod
Director/Screenwriter: Mickey Keating
A family intervention goes horrifically awry within the snowy confines of an isolated lake house.
Director/Screenwriter: Mickey Keating
A family intervention goes horrifically awry within the snowy confines of an isolated lake house.
Cast: Lauren Ashley Carter, Dean Cates, Larry Fessenden
Da Sweet
Blood of Jesus
A Spike Lee Joint, “Da
Sweet Blood of Jesus” is billed as a new kind of love story that centers on an addiction to blood that once doomed a
long-forgotten ancient African tribe. When Dr. Hess Green is introduced to a
mysteriously cursed artifact by an art curator, Lafayette Hightower, he is
uncontrollably drawn into a newfound
thirst for blood that overwhelms his soul — although he is not,
technically, a vampire. Soon Lafayette’s wife, Ganja Hightower, comes looking
for her husband and becomes involved in a dangerous romance with Hess that questions the very nature of love,
addiction, sex and status.
=== Procurio,
i izgleda kao jeftino sranje. Uz to traje dva sata. Možda vredi brauzovanja,
ali za gledanje... ne znam.===
The Man in
the Orange Jacket
Atmospheric Latvian
slasher-thriller puts a timely twist on psycho-horror conventions for an age of
economic austerity. Billed as the first-ever horror movie from Latvia, The Man in the Orange Jacket is a
stylish, ambitious, politically charged psycho-thriller. The Man in the Orange Jacket draws on some classy cinematic
antecedents, from Kubrick's The
Shining to von Trier's Antichrist via Alexandre Aja's High Tension.
=== Ovo sam
uspeo da pogledam 'preko veze': isprazno, pretenciozno, površno sranje (**).
Zadržao sam ga na listi samo kao upozorenje na to da se ne treba smesta primati
na opise i poređenja kritičara koji nisu Ghoul! ===
+
DOKUMENTARCI:
The Nightmare
Imagine waking up, seeing
someone you don't know in your room and then discovering that you can't move.
You can’t run, you can't hide – you're frozen. Sleep paralysis is a real thing
and director Rodney Ascher is about to let the world know all about it.
From the director behind Room 237, the documentary on the conspiracy theories behind Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. For his follow up, Ascher is mixing documentary filmmaking with horror in The Nightmare.
In his new movie, Ascher explores sleep paralysis in a conventional way that is turning out to be more than people bargained for: by re-enacting individual's experiences of sleep paralysis and from early reviews of the movie, which recently debuted at Sundance, The Nightmare is at once a documentary and an effective horror movie.
From the director behind Room 237, the documentary on the conspiracy theories behind Stanley Kubrick's The Shining. For his follow up, Ascher is mixing documentary filmmaking with horror in The Nightmare.
In his new movie, Ascher explores sleep paralysis in a conventional way that is turning out to be more than people bargained for: by re-enacting individual's experiences of sleep paralysis and from early reviews of the movie, which recently debuted at Sundance, The Nightmare is at once a documentary and an effective horror movie.
Richard Stanley's The Otherworld (L'autre monde)
The head-trippy doc is a
singular mix of history and ghost
stories. Richard Stanley's L'Autre Monde is part documentary
about a storied region in southwestern France, part first-hand testimony of the paranormal, and part psychedelic head trip.
Lost Soul -
The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley's 'The Island of Doctor Moreau'
Dokumentarac o najboljem
hororu koji umalo nije snimljen – i o tome ZAŠTO nije.
Leviathan:
The Story of Hellraiser and Hellbound: Hellraiser II
Iscrpan dokumentarac o mom
omiljenom horor nastavku.
Dark Star: HR
Gigers Welt
Nemački dokumentarac o
nedavno prerano preminulom geniju, slikaru i vizionaru.