Horror
This community is dedicated to those of us that love horror and want to discuss that.
Want to know what horror movie should watch next? Post here and ask the community!
Rules so you don't get your head blown up:
Rule 1 - 18+
You must be 18 or older to be active in this community.
Rule 2 - No spoilers
If you want to talk spoilers mark the post clearly! Preferable as NSFW.
Rule 3 - No self promotion / SPAM
Spamming will give you an instant ban.
Rule 4 - Be civil and respectful
Don't be a dick.
Rule 5 - No real gore images / videos
Images or videos depicting real violence or gore will not be tolerated.
Rule 6 - No discussion on piracy
Links to illegal content will get you a ban. This includes links to torrent sites and any other ways of sharing content that is copyrighted.
Rule 7 - Use NSFW tag when appropriate
If there is anything in a post that might be sensitive, then make sure to tag it as NSFW. This include images with gore. If you post a picture that has gore or might be graphic please write this above the spoiler tag!
Rule 8 - English only
This community is for english so please only post english posts and comments.
Breaking any of the above rules will make your posts removed and your user banned depending on the severity.
Want to help this community grow? We're always looking for moderators. If you don't want to be a moderator you can always make posts to help us grow that way.
Contact us if you're interested in becoming a mod!
view the rest of the comments
The Witch is the first that comes to mind, but it's hard to pick a favorite.
Interesting, The 2015 Robert Eggars VVitch? I liked it and wanted to love it, but the ending sorta fell flat for me. Literally just the last, like, five min. The entire buildup, all the way through the peak of the climax were all really good. But those last few minutes just…sorta flubbed the landing in my opinion. I still like it a lot, but I feel like
Tap for spoiler
After she kills her mom and black Philip talks to her…it just suddenly got cheesy. And the bonfire, the actual appearance of the devil who just looked like a goddamn pirate? Why did they have to do that? I loved the sort of ambiguity, I loved that it could’ve been their religious paranoia in some respects. They could’ve used the natural tricks candlelight plays on our eyes to make it look, out of focus, like black Philip was talking to her. Leave it ambiguous as if her trauma was making her see things. Why make the actual devil appear? Why not leave some room for interpretation? It was very frustrating because the execution of the rest of the movie was goddamn near flawless.Valid criticisms, and I agree there are changes that could make it better.
I agree the last couple minutes had some choices I wouldn't have made, but they didn't bother me because they felt at least internally consistent with the world of the film. Of course it isn't everyone's cup of tea, but I loved it.
Yeah, definitely agree with you on all those points. I loved so much of what they did, truly appreciate the character development, and mostly the execution of the period, the vibe by actually shooting only on gray, overcast days? It was so goddamn well done, it honestly blows my mind how they even managed to achieve it. And with so little money! $4m to do a period piece. Honestly unbelievable they managed to achieve what they did. The acting, the look, the historical accuracy, the themes—literally everything about it.
Which is what made those last few minutes so jarring for me. It just stood out so much more in stark contrast to how well everything else came together. Kinda just took me out of the moment at the most crucial time. But you’re still right, it’s great and relatively only a small part failed to do what they wanted. So still a triumph. Just makes the shortcomings sting a little more.