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The Darkness

The Darkness (2016)

May. 13,2016
|
4.5
|
PG-13
| Horror Thriller

A family returns from a Grand Canyon vacation with a supernatural presence in tow.

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Reviews

Alicia
2016/05/13

I love this movie so much

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Cubussoli
2016/05/14

Very very predictable, including the post credit scene !!!

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Curapedi
2016/05/15

I cannot think of one single thing that I would change about this film. The acting is incomparable, the directing deft, and the writing poignantly brilliant.

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Gurlyndrobb
2016/05/16

While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.

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nlxl
2016/05/17

I watched the movie on Amazon Prime (Germany) on a Saturday afternoon and thoroughly enjoyed it. It is not the scariest horror movie - and, if you watch a lot of horror movies, you might even say it is not scary at all. You will have the usual scares: noices, shadows, objects moving by themselves, etc. BUT: The story behind these is different than usually! And it has a lot of great and well-known actors. If you are into TV shows, be sure not to miss the little scenes with Jennifer Morrison ("Once Upon a Time") and Ming-Na Wen ("Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."). There's also Paul Reiser very convincingly playing a very annoying character. Kevin Bacon is a great lead and David Mazouz as Michael Taylor might be the creepiest part of the whole movie. Watch it! -- But don't necessarily compare it to movies like "The Conjuring" and its franchise or "Insidious". It's not a James Wan movie.

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fedor8
2016/05/18

Someone included this film on a list called "Modern-Day Imperialist Capitalist Propaganda". No joke. But I assure you there is nothing here remotely imperialist or political even. Bolivian mushrooms aren't a toy, they are to be avoided or at least used under supervision. All the rage among film fans.It's just an average haunted house flick. The set-up is actually fairly solid, but the movie gets a bit tiresome by the half-way point, and then simply boring in its grand finale, with silly cliche scenes of Latino psychics trying to ward off the evil demons.I doubt the film-makers understand autism. The autistic kid is never spooked by anything, whereas real autistic kids are very easily spooked and do not feel comfortable in new surroundings or strange goings-on, especially on their own. And who the hell leaves an autistic child to roam in a desert by themselves? It's very convenient for the writer to make the kid autistic so he could prevent him from telling everyone what's going on. Kind of a cheap plot-device if you ask me.

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keenansean-69856
2016/05/19

Every character in this film is unlikable. the movie doesn't set up a pemise other than spooky scooby doo rocks, and jumps straight into a "scary" movie about a over reacting daughter and a creepy and slightly annoying boy with autism, although I have no beef with the condition itself, just how the actor is in the film. and all around never will like this film.

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Mike_Devine
2016/05/20

In recent years, supernatural thrillers have tried to look for new source material beyond the tired old "haunted house inhabited by ghosts" storyline that we're used to. From voodoo spirits in the Louisiana bayous in 'The Skeleton Key' to a haunted doll in the 'Annabelle' series. In Blumhouse Productions' 2016 film 'The Darkness,' we see what happens when ancient spirits worshiped by the Anasazi Native Americans are awakened and terrorize a run-of-the-mill family from LA.Basically, what happens is the Taylor family is vacationing in the Grand Canyon when young son Michael (David Mazouz), who is Autistic, stumbles upon ancient stones that were used by the natives who inhabited the land to trap evil spirits who terrorized them. Of course, Michael takes these stones back home with him, unbeknownst to the rest of his family, and weird things begin to happen. While the premise of film is more creative than many, as is the case with a number of films in this genre, 'Darkness' falters when it comes to execution.On the acting front, this really is "The Kevin Bacon Show," as he is the lead name attached to this project. While he does a respectable job playing Taylor patriarch Peter, who is a conflicted character with a heavy past, it is not enough to bring things to life. Radha Mitchell does a solid job in the supporting role of Bronny Taylor, a recovering alcoholic who does her best to keep her family from falling apart once things begin to unravel. But this film isn't about the performances, it's about whether the entire package can make the audience feel unsettled and scared without leaving a feeling of boredom or like it was time wasted. In this sense, 'Darkness' falls short.One of the most annoying things about 'Darkness' is how uneven it is. There really is no traditional story arc or build to a climax that is resolved - the entire time, it feels like you're driving and hitting all the red lights - we see developments in the plot, but then we change directions and it's like what we saw was just a distraction. Of course, the developments are supposed to be pieces of the puzzle that should in theory be solved by the end of the film, but nothing feels this all that deliberate. It instead comes across as a a messy compilation of creepy happenings and a lot of family drama.'The Darkness' showed signs of being a promising low-budget supernatural thriller but unfortunately never gets off the ground, which explains why it was shelved and ultimately dumped into theaters when it was.

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