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The Graves
Two inseparable sister's visit to a remote mine town turns into a mind-bending fight for survival against menaces both human and supernatural.
Release : | 2010 |
Rating : | 3.6 |
Studio : | Mischief Maker Studios, Ronalds Brothers Films, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Production Design, |
Cast : | Clare Grant Bill Moseley Amanda Wyss Tony Todd Jillian Murray |
Genre : | Adventure Horror Thriller |
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Captivating movie !
Brilliant and touching
In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.
I truly wish that I had had the foresight to read a review before watching this film. Tony Todd's presence couldn't even get more than a 1/10 from me. I watched this film 2 years ago and still remember the title of it only so I can use it as a cautionary tale to friends. I have watched my fair share of films, and a decent amount of them were poorly written and acted. However, this film takes the cake as being so terrible that not even the poor quality of it can produce a laugh. I feel like the people who spawned this film had to say something to the effect of "Hey everyone, let's take two semi-attractive women with no acting experience and give them a garbage script, Tony Todd, a camera we no longer use and all of the pocket change we have on us right now, and see if we can't turn a profit."If this film actually somehow did turn a profit, I think it was somewhere in the range of 4 McDoubles-20 Chicken McNuggets. If it made more of a profit than that, I'm going to be shooting films all weekend. I think a movie of me making wookie noises at a cut out poster of Liam Neeson will sell better than this piece of trash. I'll call it Nell.
I honestly wanted to like this movie, but I had to turn it off after awhile. It was that bad. I love Bill Moseley and was absolutely smitten with Clare Grant, who should be doing porn if she isn't already. Two sisters go on a road trip and end up in an old mining town where a killer lurks. There also may be a supernatural force at work. But I never got that far. As sexy as Grant was as the older of the two sisters, and as much fun as Moseley can be in any movie, this was so amateurishly made as to be a student film. Which it may well have been, for all I know. The acting is terrible, the plot goes nowhere that I could tell, and ... why bother to go on? Avoid this WRONG TURN/HILLS HAVE EYES/Texas CHAINSAW MASSACRE knockoff. Stick with the tried and true. But I gotta tell ya, Grant was incredibly hot. She's a natural. She's the kind we boys all had a turn with back in school, but didn't marry. She's the girl next door if you live next door to a strip club. I could watch Grant read the phone book for 90 minutes.
See, this is one tricky little film. It's really low-budget and the violence looks like bad CGI.There are two ways to look at this film. The first is to dismiss it as a bad low-budget film with a very average story and the second is to accept it as a cheap horror film which tries to scare.Well, a lot of the effects (both sound and visual) are below-average but the story is decent enough to make you sit and finish the film.The actors are new and didn't really fit into a horror film. I'm talking about everyone except THE Bill Moseley. The horror icon is back as Caleb Altwood. His performance alone will keep you rooted to your seats, as he adds ridiculous humor, his catchy Cornbug singing voice and his sick twister mind and his insane pig snorts to create a great character.Overall, this film ain't bad but I gotta say this- Bill Moseley saved the day. Without his little thirty minute performance, the film wouldn't be ha;f as good as it is.
In the desolate remains of Skull City Mine, located in some godforsaken place in Arizona, two sisters find themselves in a whole heap of trouble. It was just supposed to be a tourist stop, a diner waitress informing them of the mine, how it was reputed to be haunted by spirits. What the girls do find is a psycho blacksmith with a giant hammer he uses to bludgeon the skulls of those who visit the mine. Yep, they spend the whole movie just trying to stay alive. Megan and Abby were simply on one last trip together before separating. Megan, on her way to New York City with dreams of success and a bright future. Abby, anguished at the fact that sis is heading off to the big city, leaving her behind. While Abby has always depended on big sister for strength and guidance, Megan will need her to grow up as they face insurmountable challenges. You see something evil lives within the area of the local town of Unity at the old mine and it feeds on souls with the deranged priest and his flock obeying it's command to bring it tourists as sustenance. This demon or whatever carries within a stench that causes those who breathe it to assault each other like foul beasts. The demon has one desire and that's to feast on the souls of those at the point of death.Tony Todd is the crazed priest who believes the demon is Jesus and his followers are mindless sheep answering to his will to lead souls to be eaten. Bill Moseley is, you guessed it, a lunatic after the girls and having fun during the hunt, wearing a pig snout and grinning from ear to ear, taking his time as Megan attempts to keep Abby safe from harm(Abby falls into a hole knocking herself unconscious). Most of "The Graves" consists of Abby and Megan trying to evade one psycho after another. I have a feeling Moseley will never have any problems finding work as long as there's a demand for madmen. The additional plot of flies, stench, nutty townsfolk, and an evil that eats as souls cry out in terror upon the moment of death, was a bit too much for me personally to take seriously, but maybe others will feel differently. Even Todd, who can normally create menace with the most lackluster of parts, is hard to watch as a priest constantly howling to the heavens for his savior. The movie's title is actually the last name of the heroines, who are in peril at several points throughout the movie, tied up or in dire straits, but the screenplay finds amusing ways to rescue them when there seems to be no hope. The leads are cute and they match each other which I found adorable, their tight jeans and black muscle shirts..good casting as they resemble each other(I certainly would consider them sisters if I saw them out and about).For some reason, "The Graves" simply lacked real, palpable menace, and I never really felt that the girls would bite the bullet, mainly because the film kept finding ways to release them from certain doom. Maybe it was the sunny Arizona setting that was unable to evoke a sense of dread. Or, the performances were uninspired and the cast was going through the motions..when Moseley's routine even fails to deliver, the jury's out and the verdict may be quite unkind.Many might recognize Claire Grant, who portrays Megan, as the gorgeous creature from Mick Garris' second Masters of Horror entry "Valerie in the Stairs" also starring Tony Todd. Jillian Murray is Abby, with Amanda Wyss(80's regular in movies such as A Nightmare on Elm Street and Better Off Dead)as a diner waitress who suffers a grisly fate. A great deal of the violence happens off screen or just out of frame, with most of the carnage established in our mind as blood squirts and splatters to recognize victims' gruesome demises.