In Spanish with English Subtitles
Genre: Horror/Thriller
Director: Jaume Balaguero, Paco Plaza
Cast: Manuela Velasco, Ferran Terraza, Javier
Botet, Manuel Bronchud, Martha Carbonell, Claudia Font, Vicente
Gil, María Teresa Ortega, Pablo Rosso
RunTime: 1 hr 15 mins
Released By: GV
Rating: TBA
Official Website: http://www.wildsideproject.com/site/rec/
Opening Day: 30 October 2008
Synopsis:
[.REC] revolves around a television reporter, Angela, and
her cameraman, Pablo, who cover the night shift in one of
Barcelona's local fire stations. The firehouse receives a
call from an old lady trapped in her house. When they arrive,
and the firemen and the police break down the door, the old
lady suddenly attacks and bites one of the policemen, and
it is revealed that an unknown but virulent disease is infecting
people, causing them to turn into zombies. The police and
the military quarantine the building and the camera crew is
trapped inside, constantly recording the mayhem that ensues.
By the finale they uncover the horrifying truth of the situation
and realise the infection may be more than a mere virus.
Movie Review:
In 1999, a little independent movie that was The Blair Witch
Project made news when it achieved a successful ratio of box
office sales to production cost in American filmmaking history.
While academics went on to discuss the movie’s accomplishment
of using the Internet for spiral publicity, other mere mortals
went on to talk about the movie’s unforgettable shaky
camera work. The effect it had on movie goers made many swore
never to step into a low cost horror movie again.
Eight
years later, without considering that this concept of incorporating
the camera and crew into the film's plot may be a stale idea,
Spanish filmmakers Jaume Balaguero (Fragile) and Paco Plaza
(Romasanta: The Werewolf Hunt) decided to make this horror
thriller, complete with shaky camera work. The movie went
on to win numerous awards at festivals like the Catalonian
Film International Festival, the Gerardmer Film Festival and
the main national film event at home in Spain, the Goya Awards.
For
a horror movie to achieve that, it is something worth shouting
about. Or to put it more aptly in context, screaming about
– we have not felt so squeamish at the movies for quite
a while.
The
story isn’t anything to be excited because you know
victims will drop dead one by one anyway: A young (and pretty!)
television reporter (played convincingly by Manuela Velasco)
and her cameraman are on the night shift at a fire department
when a sudden call to rescue an elderly woman comes in. The
ambitious (and brave!) duo follows the rescue team crew to
save the poor (and potentially dangerous!) hag trapped in
her apartment. All hell breaks loose when they arrive at the
scene, and the objective to shoot the entire happenings becomes
a terrible nightmare.
We
have seen many zombie movies, and after a while, we do get
numbed by the gory makeup, the obligatory shocks, the dreary
fear to hide from the monsters and the tedious commentary
on commercialism and society. So when something so dumbfounding
comes along, we sat up and watched, in fear nonetheless, as
the screams get increasingly bloodcurdling throughout the
movie’s brief 75 minute runtime.
From
the get go, this picture wastes no time in setting up the
plot. Before you know it, people are getting infected by an
unknown virus, people are turning into bloodthirsty creatures,
and you are crouching in fear as the filmmakers terrify you
with the movie’s every spot on scare. For the faint
hearted, this will stress your gentle nerves. For the braver
viewers, we can’t guarantee that you will hold that
“no horror movie will ever scare me” title. Other
than effectively using handheld camera work, the movie also
utilizes the video camera’s technical functions of night
vision and audio distortion to make this a truly engrossing
horror experience.
The
movie acts like a thrilling but claustrophobic haunted house
roller coaster ride: There is no space for you to breathe,
and the atmosphere is so tense you don’t know what to
do with your popcorn. Watch out for that falling corpse from
above! Beware of that demon child in the attic! Look out for
that possessed monster lounging towards you! We are sure that
you’d be as disturbed as us when the movie ends.
Movie Rating:
(Be it the deafening silence or the piercingly horrific
screams, you’ll be shrouded in fear by this gleefully
scary movie)
Review by John Li
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