Dark Was the Night

  • Australie Dark Was the Night (plus)
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Résumés(1)

Revolves around the isolated town of Maiden Woods, where a nearby logging company has disrupted the balance of the life in the woods. From the frozen forest an evil will emerge and threaten the local citizens, their only hope being the local Sheriff and his trusted Deputy. (texte officiel du distributeur)

Vidéo (1)

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Critiques (3)

POMO 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Deux acteurs secondaires connus renforcent l'atmosphère du film B-horreur à petit budget. La psychologisation du personnage principal traumatisé est appréciée, jouée par Kevin Durand, elle est crédible. L'atmosphère de la petite ville américaine d'automne est également bonne, ses habitants simples sont une proie facile pour la créature. Et la tonalité triste et sombre, chargée d'une musique sombre et de filtres de caméra froids, lui donne une identité puissante. Il ne faut juste pas s'attendre à des idées de scénario révolutionnaires ou à des monstres effrayants. Ceux-ci n'apparaissent que brièvement et sont une déception totale avec leur conception artistique et leur réalisation numérique. Trois étoiles avec les oreilles qui se relèvent. ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais "Dark Was the Night" is not a bad movie at all, it's rather unassuming and its biggest problem is that it simply isn't original. However, it is well shot, it is shot in a way that will entertain you. Additionally, there is a monster that essentially doesn't appear throughout the whole film, you only see hints of it or what it leaves behind. In this regard, it is a good craft that is worth checking out. ()

Annonces

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Heller doesn’t lack talent, he proved that already in his début Enter Nowhere. In his second film he delivers a solid monster horror story with a creature that terrorises a small town, first killing the pets and then inhabitants. It’s slow, sombre and with bleached colours. Heller is competent at building an atmosphere, but it’s a shame that when the monster is fully revealed in the end I was quite disappointed; it was better when all you could see were the claws or its silhouette. But the main problem I have (and the reason I’m sticking to a safe three-star rating) is that, given the premise and the straightforward script, Dark Was the Night is almost absurdly serious. Plot-wise it’s just and ordinary monster B-movie, and the script doesn’t even try to be original or creative in any way, but the characters at times act and speak as if they were in a Dostoevsky play. ()

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