Home > Horror >

Don't Look Up

AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

Don't Look Up (2010)

April. 20,2010
|
3.1
|
R
| Horror
AD:This title is currently not available on Prime Video
Free Trial
View All Sources

While filming in Transylvania, a crew unearths celluloid images of a woman’s murder and unleashes the wrath of evil spirits.

...

Watch Trailer

Free Trial Channels

AD
Show More

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Lovesusti
2010/04/20

The Worst Film Ever

More
Solidrariol
2010/04/21

Am I Missing Something?

More
Helloturia
2010/04/22

I have absolutely never seen anything like this movie before. You have to see this movie.

More
Marva-nova
2010/04/23

Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.

More
GL84
2010/04/24

Traveling to Romania to finish a legendary movie, a troubled director and his crew must deal with the effects of a deadly curse over the production killing off anyone involved and deal with it before succumbing to it.Overall this one was pretty enjoyable if slightly disappointing effort. This one really tends to get going with the rather enjoyable and exciting back-story here detailing the effects of the gypsy curse and revelations about the early film here which is quite the creepy story that would've made for a rather enjoyable film had it ever been filmed. This makes the filming of these scenes quite enjoyable as there's a fine sense of atmosphere displayed there during these scenes when looking back at them through the film-cameras which makes many of these accidents quite thrilling when falling lights, broken rigs and failing light-work all conspire against the crew in a slew of grisly accidents that come off rather nicely here to carry on the legacy of the curse here in addition to the few startling ghost attacks up on the stage- rafters and the ambush down in the basement. This also brings up the events of the final half as the true value of that curse comes about with deadly accidents in the development lab, a thrilling revelation sequence on the movie set as the replayed events of the original story are enacted and then finally meeting up with the main spirit which causes this one to really get a decent enough finish here to help it somewhat against the few flaws here. Among the biggest is the fact that there's just no end to the rather convoluted and completely meaningless visions that he keeps experiencing which don't really further the movie at all. Rather than serving as a way to keep the filmed movie going or gaining insight into how to defeat the ghostly being stalking around, which is what's to be expected in this kind of situation here, they're more used to showcase supposedly creepy images and jump-scares that don't mean much instead as there's little purpose to them, and simply being there to remind us how troubled he is doesn't help matters so all these scenes do is serve to highlight the film's next big problem in the uneven pacing. There's so many stretches here where nothing really happens that there's times when this one tends to run aground and derail itself by not going for the main storyline involving the curse on display against the film crew as they deal with their own petty problems or utilizing his moronic visions that keep the ghost actually off-screen so long into this one until the final battle. That in itself is the biggest issue holding this one back, as while the lame CGI for the lone ghost sequence might be another detriment it's not as bad compared to these other factors that hold this one down.Rated R: Graphic Violence and Graphic Language.

More
BA_Harrison
2010/04/25

Marcus Reed (Reshad Strik), a film-maker troubled by strange visions, travels to Romania to try and make a movie based on a long lost film by legendary '20s director Béla Olt (Eli Roth). Reed's film is hampered by strange accidents on-set: is Marcus losing his mind or is an ancient gypsy curse causing his problems?Don't Look Up is a remake of the 1996 Japanese film Joyû-rei; it is an American/Japanese/South African co-production starring an international cast and directed by Asian film-maker Fruit Chan. No wonder it's a bloody mess. The first half of the film is extremely boring, while the second half makes no sense whatsoever.A couple of gruesome death scenes and frequent clouds of CGI flies do nothing to make this garbage any more bearable. Boring dialogue, terrible acting, horrible editing effects, a set that looks like an old derelict junkyard, an irritating Romanian character who says 'Mr. Marcus' every few seconds: this sorry excuse for a horror film is a total dud from dull start to utterly incomprehensible finish.

More
Nano Maciá
2010/04/26

I just want to highlight the extremely low quality of the background scenarios. Anyone paid attention to the plastic weeds on the walls? The ivy leaves were as petrified as the walls of the filming set, which was far from realistic. The stone ladder was designed by somebody who knows as much architecture as me. I had to do a real effort to continue seeing this film after the scene in which all the filming crew rush in a total disorder after a death of one of their work partners. People were dying in front of the eyes of others, but nobody was concerned about them! Moreover, they not even try to save their lives in any way. A total lack of sensitivity. I even feel that this is an absolute lack of respect for people suffering from some kind of mental illness and cancer as well. This film deserve to be in the top ten of worst horror films ever.

More
Ben Larson
2010/04/27

The formula has been repeated so often you have to wonder why they don't just quit.Take a good Japanese suspense film of the same name, which was directed by Hideo Nakata (The Ring Trilogy), and had a screenplay by Hiroshi Takahashi, who also wrote the screenplays for the Ring Trilogy. and bring in a big time director (Fruit Chan) and someone to adapt the screenplay to add gore instead of suspense (Brian Cox), add some American eye candy (Rachael Murphy), and you have a film that is a pale imitation of the original directed to teens.Forget the eye candy, find the original.

More