I really haven't had much movie coverage on this here blog. It's not because I don't like movies, but it's just that they're so expensive now that I usually wait until they come out on DVD. I never rented with that much frequency, but now that I'm a proud member of Netflix nation, I can finally understand all of the movie references that the cool kids are talking about.
I've decided to start a new feature here at The Pop Eye, called (obviously) "Battle of the Netflix Stars." Since I've already seen several flicks via this wonderful service, I thought doubling up on the movie reviews would save me some time and energy. But then I thought, hey, why not make these movies fight each other for my love all the time? And thus, a new recurring topic was born.
Bout #1: Battle of the Indie Horror Flicks
I've decided to start a new feature here at The Pop Eye, called (obviously) "Battle of the Netflix Stars." Since I've already seen several flicks via this wonderful service, I thought doubling up on the movie reviews would save me some time and energy. But then I thought, hey, why not make these movies fight each other for my love all the time? And thus, a new recurring topic was born.
Bout #1: Battle of the Indie Horror Flicks
Movie: | The Devil's Backbone | The Abandoned |
Year: | 2001 | 2006 |
Director: | Guillermo del Toro | Nacho Cerdå |
Star Power: | None (but there's a hot Spanish dude to make up for it). | None. |
Plot: | After his father dies in the Spanish Civil War, Carlos comes to live at an isolated orphanage. He sees a lot of strange things, including an unexploded bomb in the middle of the courtyard, a very shifty (but hot) caretaker, and the ghost of Santi, a boy who mysteriously disappeared from the orphanage years earlier. Santi starts visiting Carlos regularly to warn him that many people will soon die. Are his warnings the threats of an avenging spirit or predictions of the very real dangers of war? | A woman travels to Russia in search of information about her birth mother, who died shortly after she was born. Upon arriving at the creepy family farm, she realizes that something weird is going on, and that she's not the only one in search of answers. |
Pros: | Well-written and acted, beautifully filmed, creepy atmosphere, sub-plots that are just as interesting as the main plot, no story lulls. (Oh, and did I mention the hot caretaker?) | The voice-over at the end was kind of funny. |
Cons: | It's subtitled. | The voice-over at the end wasn't supposed to be funny. |
My Thoughts: | Don't let the one "con" scare you away - I barely noticed the subtitles because I was so completely engrossed in the film. I really don't even think this belongs in the "horror" genre, because it's more of a drama with a supernatural element, like The Sixth Sense, but even more rooted in reality. There's something for everyone here: chills, intrigue, war, friendship, unrequited love and even a little humor. | I must have said, "This doesn't make any f'ing sense" about 20 times out loud while watching this piece of garbage. The writers, Karim Hussain & Nacho Cerdà , must have just ripped off a bunch of ideas from The Twilight Zone and movies like The Others and Identity, and jammed them into this jumbled mess. There is no character development, so you have no sympathy for these idiots and "the twists" are so easy to figure out that you just can't wait for everyone to be dead already. Take a pass on this one. I'm sure you can think of something more interesting to do with those 94 minutes of your life. |
Final Grade: | A | F |
Comments
like you i cannot remember the last movie i went to -- way too expensive.
You've only missed one episode that played all weekend...
I was a member of netflix for years. Now I get out of work so late they started making money offa ME. I DVR everything now.
I did catch a really good flick on demand called "Gone baby gone". check it out.
I actually like subtitles (makes me feel all cool and indie), so I'll be keeping an eye out for The Devil's Backbone.
Because of this movie and other good (and not so) foreign movies I've rented from Netflix I am no longer afraid of movies with subtitles.
BTW, your chart - AWESEOME.
Nice!
Someone should so seriously be paying you to write.
I'm a big Guillermo del Torro fan. I'm totally adding this to my queue. Thanks for the review.