Entity
S**K
Eerie, different and haunting - above all, scary
(This review was originally written for ThisIsHorror.co.uk following a special screening of the film.)The first few minutes of 'Entity' establish its style very quickly: the opening minutes show grainy, flickering video footage of a shaven-headed, emaciated man in a bare, dark cell with a metal-framed bed. First in an institutional smock, then naked, he sobs, moans, shakes, and finally levitates.This is followed by an opening sequence consisting of shots of a bare winter wood, and a camera crew moving through it. 'Entity' is not - thankfully, in a period near-glutted with the things - a found-footage film. It combines sequences shot in that style with a more polished, almost lyrical terror built through more traditional `third person' filmmaking. To director Steve Stone's credit, it achieves a cruelly effective synthesis of the two.Several years ago, at Sadovich, a remote location in Northern Russia, 34 bodies, male and female, were discovered in shallow graves. The police investigation was quickly closed, with neither victims, perpetrators, nor even the cause of death, identified. Now, a camera crew from the UK TV show Darkest Secrets, led by Kate (Riley) revisits the scene, with cameraman Matt (Hill), sound guy David (Jackson), local author-cum-guide Yuri (Tomovic) and psychic Ruth Peacock (Kirwan) in tow.It doesn't take Ruth long to identify the field where the bodies were found, to start seeing the victims' ghosts, or indeed, to relive their deaths. It soon becomes clear the executions were carried out by the Soviet authorities. Ruth's psychic abilities lead her through the woods to an abandoned, grim-looking building. Further investigation uncovers evidence of appalling institutional torture and cruelty, and slowly Ruth comes to realise what Sadovich is: a Cold War experimental facility designed to transform people like herself into a weapons system for assassination and sabotage. When it failed, the facility was shut down and the surviving inmates executed. But while most of the dead are only anguished, there's one who's different. Known only as Mischka, he's full of rage and wants only vengeance, and he has the power to enact it. Meanwhile, it becomes clear that Yuri, the guide, has his own agenda for coming to Sadovich.'Entity's storyline was apparently inspired by its locations in Riccall, Yorkshire and was written to be filmed there, much as Brad Anderson's Session 9 was written `for' Danvers State Hospital (although Sadovich's horrors - one hopes, at least - are fictional). Stone milks the grim, functional location for all it's worth, and shows a fine sense of when a glimpse of something is far better than a sustained look, or indeed when it's better to show nothing at all.Another advantage of Stone's technique is that it's able to establish very early on the unambiguous nature of Ruth's psychic abilities, even though the dead of Sadovich are initially only visible to her, and thus extend the range of options he has to scare the daylights out of the viewer. Be assured that he takes full advantage of these.'Entity' also features great use of sound - both in Dave S Walker's atmospheric score and in Mark Ashworth's superlative sound design which lays down a constant backdrop of noise - quiet and loud - the combination of which swiftly and lastingly establish Sadovich as a place of terrible threat. Special mention should also go to the haunting and beautiful Penitential Hymn that appears over the opening and end credits.Dervla Kirwan is, as always, excellent in the role of Ruth, all haunted, glacial calm underlaid with intense, repressed emotion. The rest of the cast, particularly Riley and Tomovic, rise to the occasion admirably. Charlotte Riley's Kate is clearly in command, ruling the roost with a judicious mixture of personal force and manipulation. When Ruth falters, repelled by the Sadovich complex's malevolent atmosphere, Kate persuades her to press on by appealing to her compassion for the victims (`who's going to tell their stories?'), but with enough humanity and vulnerability to stop her being completely unlikeable. Tomovic's Yuri never becomes a stereotypical sinister East European, but manages to evoke compassion even when his real purposes are declared.Entity is genuinely frightening. It combines dread-laden atmospherics with a wealth of `jump' moments'. Fine photography and use of sound, an intelligent script and strong performances add to the blood-chilling effect. Well worth a look.
R**M
Mild Horror
Now I don't understand why people put themselves at risk by going into the woods, especially when horrible things happened there years earlier, Silly people but than again we wouldn't have these movies to watch would we. The story is great the actors do a marvellous job as to performing their parts. Story goes as a British television crew search in the remote part of the Siberian forest after hearing about the horror that went on years earlier and want to discover the truth of it all. There is a lot more to say but why spoil a good flick by telling it all, wonderful and different with a few strange twist included that will take your notice. I rated this an B grade for the ideas throughout the show and with full on suspense, not overdone and very watchable. Grab the movie plus the popcorn put the television on get everything ready so you can sit and relax in the comfort of your own home, for a bit of entertainment that will keep you glued to the television waiting for what is next. Enjoy!
F**D
ok
ok
M**W
Unorginal. Not for real horror fans.
First of all, I am an avid horror film fanatic. I have 400-500 horror films. Have seen well over a thousand.This film? I have seen over 2 dozen exactly like it.Mediocre acting, dull and unimaginative storyline, same old same old. Too many loud sounds that are supposed to "add tension" but are poorly done, instead they're irritating.PLOT SPOILERS....In a nutshell, as always, some investigators seek out this place of mass deaths. With a psychic. Psychic leads them to.. Suprise suprise... An old abandoned building. They look around, see something spooky, and as always, one member goes inexplicably missing. Then, as always, two members go looking for him, while two stay back at "base". Shock shock, there is a powerful presence in building, guess what? Yep, their friend is dead. Blah blah, their in this building, big bad presence, they all die. Only two slightly original components, both of which are incredibly predictable, one of them men has been in building before to look for some one, tries to make them all stay, dies. Other one? Yep, their ghosts are trapped in building. My friends 6 year old daughter can write more unpredictable, and original stories...This is nothing more than a regurgitation of the same old rubbish, nothing about this is special. I am one of those people who HAVE to watch a film all the way through, 12 minutes in I was bored and already wishing the film would hurry up and end.If you aren't a horror fan, and are easily scared then this might be ok for you. I personally wouldn't recommend it. I feel I have been cheated out of £2 odd for the rental of this. Would not sit through it again if you paid me.
A**R
I need a regional code to play the movie can you tell me what that is.
I can’t play the movie because it’s asking me for a regional code can you tell me what that is what to do?
A**E
Waste of money - wrong zone...
Same here. The CD can't be played in north america. So what the %?@& does the CA in Rarewaves-CA.mean??? Caledonia?
J**F
Nullissime
Une sorte de sous Blair Witch, sans sous-titres de surcroit, jeu des acteurs nul, scénario hyper classique, à fuir !
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