Ohjaus:
Nicolas PesceKuvaus:
Zack GallerSävellys:
The Newton BrothersNäyttelijät:
Andrea Riseborough, Demián Bichir, John Cho, Betty Gilpin, Lin Shaye, Jacki Weaver, Frankie Faison, William Sadler, Nancy Sorel, Tara Westwood (lisää)Suoratoistopalvelut (4)
Juonikuvaukset(1)
A curse born in Japan is simultaneously unleashed in the U.S. Those who encounter it are consumed by its fury and met with a violent fate. Producer Sam Raimi brings us the untold chapter of this horror classic. (Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)
Videot (2)
Arvostelut (4)
I foolishly thought it would be a remake of the original Ju-On. But this is actually a very bad joke. Essentially, it's just a sequence of random scenes with random people that are somehow connected, but the whole idea is actually completely stupid and leaves the audience totally unimpressed because absolutely nothing works in this "horror" movie. At most, there's the troubled expression of Andrey Riseborough, whom I am starting to doubt for taking on this role. There's no point in talking about the horror aspect. I'm surprised that in 2020, someone still dares to produce this for cinemas. I'll just pretend I didn't see this film and probably have a happier life. I missed at least Kayako in there. ()
I haven't seen the old The Grudge so I can't compare, but there's no need to because this couldn't have gone any worse, and at the end of 2019 this is clearly the worst cinema experience, people even left the theatre or were texting. I wasn't expecting much from the director of three mediocre horror films, but what he's delivered here has makes no sense. From the beginning the film feels terribly B-ish, the cadence of scares is 10 in 5 minutes, but not ONE of them was good. The atmosphere is completely lacking because there is no room for it in the 93 minute running time, and that is where the low budget shows. There is a lack of dialogue or character portrayal, scenes jump from one to another without continuity just to save time, and what the horror film lacks in atmosphere, the director tried to make up for in abnormally loud scares where the only scary thing is the decibels from the speakers, not the scene itself. Stupid, without a shred of an idea and brutally botched, this should be banned from release, let alone theatrical release... I was counting down the minutes until the end, please avoid this film by all means. ()
I went to the exclusive New Year’s Eve advanced première of The Grudge at Cinestars (which anyone who passed by and bought a ticket could attend) expecting at best something average, which was fulfilled. If there’s something that deserves praise in the new The Grudge is the effort to make an adult horror film without pleasing teenage audiences. Visually, it’s ugly rather than cool, and the main character, Andrea Risebororough, can’t be said to be one the prettiest actresses at first sight. But that this effort resulted in a particularly recommendable film, that can’t be said. Like in the previous The Grudge and Ju-on: The Grudge, we have a story of murder related to some curse told in a non-chronological way, and the whole thing is pointless. A lot of time is spent on characters whose fates are clear (spoiler: they die), leaving little for the female protagonist in the last chronological line. What’s funny is that the creators want the viewer to fear for the fate of the main character’s son, even if they don’t have the chance to get to like him in any way. The care the creators put in portraying the relationship is clear from the fact that the son appears at the beginning of the film and doesn’t show up again until almost an hour later. The new The Grudge looks like falling apart, as if it had been violently cut – which is very possible, given that its original première was pushed back a year. As a result, it lacks drive, pace and escalation, and the continuity of each of the scenes is very problematic. 5/10 ()
The Grudge is an American co-production made by Sam Raimi and Takeshi Shimizu, the creator of the original Japanese horror franchise Ju-On: The Grudge and this movie is an American remake. This remake is just about different enough, albeit only slightly, and I don’t think that is enough. In my view all this movie does is try to cash in on a familiar brand but lacks originality. ()
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