The Curse of Sleeping Beauty - Dornröschens Fluch
Thomas Kaiser erbt unerwartet ein altes Anwesen von seinem Onkel. Allerdings bekommt der junge Mann nicht nur das darauf stehende große Haus, sondern auch gleich einen uralten Fluch aus den ... Alles lesenThomas Kaiser erbt unerwartet ein altes Anwesen von seinem Onkel. Allerdings bekommt der junge Mann nicht nur das darauf stehende große Haus, sondern auch gleich einen uralten Fluch aus den Tagen der Kreuzzüge mitgeliefert.Thomas Kaiser erbt unerwartet ein altes Anwesen von seinem Onkel. Allerdings bekommt der junge Mann nicht nur das darauf stehende große Haus, sondern auch gleich einen uralten Fluch aus den Tagen der Kreuzzüge mitgeliefert.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 wins total
- Veiled Demon (Voice)
- (Synchronisation)
- Mannequin
- (as T. J. Vindigni)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Another B-horror flick based on a classic Brothers Grimm fairy tale. This one is a dark modern update of 'Sleeping Beauty' (written by the Brothers Grimm and Charles Perrault); it deals with an art painter, who inherits an ancient curse (which involves dreams of a 'sleeping beauty'). The film was directed by Pearry Reginald Teo; and it was scripted by Teo and first time feature film writer Josh Nadler (based on the comic book by Everette Hartsoe). It stars India Eisley, Ethan Peck, Natalie Hall and Bruce Davison. The movie received harshly negative reviews from critics, and a large percentage of viewers as well. I hated it at first; but then I grew to enjoy it more, as it went on.
The story centers around an art painter, named Thomas Kaiser (Peck), who keeps having dreams of a beautiful sleeping woman (Eisley). He continuously tries to wake her, but is unsuccessful. Thomas later learns of his uncle's suicide, and the mansion he left him; which had been in his family for generations. While investigating the property, for appraisal reasons, Thomas also learns of an ancient curse there, and his role as the 'protector'. He must keep the demons in his new home imprisoned there, while also trying to awake the sleeping beauty. He finds help from a friendly realtor (Hall), and a paranormal investigator (Davison).
For the first 45-minutes of the movie, I was completely bored (and falling asleep). The acting and writing were atrocious; and the film was really repetitive, and uninvolving. Then, about halfway through the movie, it got a lot more interesting, and entertaining. Once it got to the story, it became filled with more tense, and very gruesome, imagery (and stunningly beautiful women). At that point, I enjoyed it a lot more. It's still mostly a bore, and a misfire, but a sequel could be a lot better (which the end is completely set up for).
Watch our movie review show 'MOVIE TALK' at: https://youtu.be/bmrjYaOGPmk
It's obviously a lower budget film. If you watch this knowing and accepting it for what it is, not expecting high quality effects, then it is enjoyable. I felt they did well at creating the suspense and creepiness with what they had.
The actors really brought this to life. They made it more believable. The main actor was great. He portrayed the pain and confusion well. Even when the sets were a touch lack-luster and less believable, he conveyed the emotions to make it seem more real than it looked.
The ending seems to be where most people have an issue. I won't go into detail as I would rather avoid spoilers. I can see how people would find it rushed. The beginning of the movie moves slower and builds suspense, then the end moves a bit faster. However, I liked the ending. I found it to be different, if this were a Hollywood movie it would have a Hollywood ending, it is not that, do not expect that.
Addition observation: The house was beautiful, imagine what that place looks like all cleaned up.
Which is why it is so frustrating and such a big shame that 'The Curse of Sleeping Beauty' was so disjointed and uneven, as someone who was really rooting for the film to work. Do have to agree with the general consensus that 'The Curse of Sleeping Beauty' started off well and promisingly, was really thinking that it would be surprisingly good, but fell apart completely in the second half and kept getting worse. There are definitely far worse wastes of potential and good concepts, but 'The Curse of Sleeping Beauty' was definitely a definition of a waste of potential and a waste of a great idea.
It, as aforementioned, starts off well. Throughout the production values generally were atmospherically Gothic and nicely shot with eerie make-up. The music also has a haunting eeriness that doesn't feel intrusive, one-note or repetitive. Mostly the acting was better than average, having seen some very bad to terrible acting in modest to low budget films recently so that was refreshing.
Atmosphere generated is genuinely creepy, wonderful mysterious and suspenseful going at a deliberate but assured pace.
Sadly, again as already said, the second half sees 'The Curse of Sleeping Beauty' falling apart. And not just slightly, we're talking significantly. Not that the film was perfect already. There was some choppy editing, cheap costuming and Ethan Peck doesn't always look comfortable or engaged in his role.
Really, it is frustrating that the more the second half progressed, the duller, more confused, more clichéd and more predictable it got, and the mystery, creepiness and suspense got lost and instead was replaced by dreariness, ridiculousness and a draggy pace. All capped off by an ending that was far too abrupt and incomplete.
Overall, good first half, disappointing second half with a bad non-event ending. 5/10 Bethany Cox
This relative B-horror alludes to the Brothers Grimm story. It's a haunted house horror. It has elements of Silent Hill. The mannequins have good potential. I would have liked Thomas and Linda to stay in the house. Leaving there to go pick up Richard and Daniel is a waste of time. There could be more done with Sleeping Beauty, both the idea and the character. This horror feels a bit undercooked.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesIndia Eisley was originally to play a young version of Angelina Jolie's character in Maleficent, a spin-off of the Sleeping Beauty tale, but the character was dropped from the script.
- Zitate
Briar Rose: Thomas.
Thomas: [mumbling to himself] I always woke up before. This can't be a dream. It's too real.
Briar Rose: This realm is like a dream. One where we can both dwell.
Thomas: You're in my head.
Briar Rose: As you are in mine. I am also close to you in the physical world. That is the reason I'm awake.
Thomas: Sleeping Beauty. That's what I called you before.
Briar Rose: Briar Rose is my given name.
Thomas: I like that. When you said you're close to me in the physical world, what do you mean?
Briar Rose: I'm still asleep. Awaiting your kiss.
Top-Auswahl
- How long is The Curse of Sleeping Beauty?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 96.881 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 29 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1