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The Nightmare
After a massive party one evening, 17-year-old Tina begins experiencing nightmares in which she is haunted by an unusual creature.
Release : | 2015 |
Rating : | 6.5 |
Studio : | OOO-Films, Bon Voyage Films, |
Crew : | Cinematography, Director, |
Cast : | Carolyn Genzkow Arnd Klawitter Julika Jenkins Alexander Scheer Wilson Gonzalez Ochsenknecht |
Genre : | Drama Horror Mystery |
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Reviews
You won't be disappointed!
It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
It is a whirlwind of delight --- attractive actors, stunning couture, spectacular sets and outrageous parties.
By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
The Nightmare begins with Tina and two of her friends heading to a rave. At the rave, where she is letting loose, she sees Adam, somebody who she apparently wants to stay far away from. She is also shown a video of a woman being run over by a car. After drinking too much, and getting back to the car, she realizes her necklace is missing. Seeing the necklace on the road, she goes to collect it, and is herself hit by the car. Next we know she wakes up inside the car.Sounds like the start of a pretty good time-loop movie. But, focus then switches to strange sounds and things Tina hears. Are they in her head? Are they real? are they both? Is anything what it seems?In trying to bring both of these ideas together, the movie loses the plot a few times, and the viewer is left wondering what is actually supposed to be going on. Some scenes stretch on for too long, while others aren't long enough. Add to this scenes which are cut like a rave, and it's all too much to make any sense.It truly is a shame, as the nightmare probably does have two pretty decent concepts in there. Unfortunately they're totally lost when shoved together.
"The Nightmare" is the kind of movie that isn't as interesting to watch as it is to read or think about. I believe the direction is what undercuts it; moments don't have the impact they should have. Scenes could have been shot and handled better, but with the wobbly camera, the director himself feels like just another stoned bystander among the movie's teenage ravers.The story is about a party girl who is apparently hit by a car. She survives with no visible injury, but begins to have visions of a creature that looks like a cross between Gollum from "Lord of the Rings" and Dobby the House Elf.The people around her believe that she is going crazy, and perhaps she is.There are several sequences that appear to show the movie rewinding itself, perhaps as an indication to us that the movie is not occurring on a linear timescale. It may also be telling us that the events we just witnessed are the culmination of what we are witnessing again in the rewind sequence.The problem is that the movie doesn't have a sure hand at the controls. It's too disjointed to make you really curious about what you're seeing. The concept is interesting enough, however, to recommend it to students of the weird.
Awesome film. I saw an excellent combination on the same evening, first a documentary titled Zen For Nothing, about a Swiss girl spending some 6 months at a zen monastery in japan. A very quiet film about finding yourself, some of the characters eventually experiencing a cathartic moment, letting their emotional demons out along the way, meditating, working or just chatting the rest of the time. I knew that Nachtmahr was going to be quite the opposite as I had read about the subject and the rave music and aggressive lights etc, but it was a total surprise to discover that it touched on a similar theme as the zen documentary.Of course the social environments are completely different and it is significant that Nachtmahr is about a teenager's emotional state and the two couldn't be stylistically more different, but nevertheless both films are about finding and asserting one's true self. I actually recommend watching the two as a sort of diptych as they really complement each other: on the one hand the silence, bells and zen chanting immersed in subdued natural winter light, on the other the wild aggressive rave beats and flashing colored electrical strobe lights. Apart from that, I really enjoyed the rave scenes, the visuals the structure or storytelling and the underlying humor as well as the "unpretentiousness" and obvious "not big budget productionness" of Der Nachtmahr. If you liked films like Morvern Callar, Aurora and David Lynch films, you'll like this.. It's not hard to find flaws if you're after the perfect festival winning movie but this film is not perfect and I loved that about it.
I watched Der Nachtmahr as part of the Glasgow Youth Film Festival, and enjoyed it very much. Depending how you look at it, it's a monster film or a coming-of-age drama. The film blends both in a smooth way, which introduces clever twists and fresh takes that will appeal to fans of both genres.Carolyn Genzkow delivers a striking performance that clearly marks the many stages in the struggles of Tina, the protagonist, against the challenges of growing up alienated and misunderstood in 2010s Berlin. Commonplace locations come across as eye-catching visuals because of the lavish cinematography, matched by a booming club soundtrack. Likewise, it's always a pleasure to see Kim Gordon on screen, and an even greater one to hear her voice (the Sonic Youth vocalist has a minor role in the film as an English language teacher discussing William Blake with her students).Der Nachtmahr is one of those films that don't give you a fully rounded, unequivocal plot with a nifty moral message attached. It requires you to think about it and come up with your own interpretations. That's what makes it so enjoyable to watch: the characters, situations and outcomes are very powerful, and fun to explore as you put them together to understand their significance.If you're expecting flashy CGI peppered with jump scares, or schmaltzy self-help masquerading as fiction, you won't find it here. Der Nachtmahr is a poetic, low-key movie about monsters, whether real or perceived. The dangerous sound frequencies it warns you about in an introductory disclaimer are probably no more hazardous than those in Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music, but be careful with the flickering lights of the club scenes: a friend of mine came along and had to leave after five minutes to get some paracetamol. And he's not even epileptic (it was just a petit mal migraine, though, no more).