Manhattan Baby

  • France La Malédiction du pharaon (plus)

Résumés(1)

An archaelogist opens an Egyptian tomb and accidently releases an evil spirit. His young daughter becomes possessed by the freed enity and, upon arrival back in New York, the gory murders begin. (StudioCanal)

Critiques (2)

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais "Child from Manhattan: The Devil Comes" is not the best film by Lucio Fulci, but I would definitely include it among the most interesting ones he has made. It is difficult to get into it, some viewers may not even succeed, but as a mosaic of terrifying images and events, this film is still impressive and there is something to look at in it. It doesn't grip you with its concept, which is a great disadvantage, but I wouldn't completely reject it either. ()

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais After the worldwide mega-success of Indiana Jones, Fulci rode the wave of the fashionable popularity of Egyptian mythology and based his new film largely on it. He attached to it a somewhat tame story about a little girl who, while exploring her father's archaeological site somewhere in Egypt, receives a jewel from an old woman with white eyeballs that later takes over her body and mind in Manhattan. So, there's not much to look at this time, Fulci's direction gives a very somnolent impression, and the viewer gets to see his typical trademark in a single scene only in the last 10 minutes, when a stuffed bird in the professor's apartment comes to life and dismembers the poor scientist's face and neck, with even some gut-pulling following. Moreover, Fulci is, more than ever, obsessed with eyes, there are about 25 close-ups of eyes during the film, and it gets tiresome towards the end. Fulci's court composer Fabio Frizzi then rips himself off, sometimes his music doesn't match the action on the screen at all. ()

Annonces

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