Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter a near-death experience, Vanessa Shepherd faces nightmares in Abaddon. As mysterious deaths occur around her, she discovers her connection to the Abaddon Hotel, Carmichael Manor, and d... Alles lesenAfter a near-death experience, Vanessa Shepherd faces nightmares in Abaddon. As mysterious deaths occur around her, she discovers her connection to the Abaddon Hotel, Carmichael Manor, and decades of unexplained murders.After a near-death experience, Vanessa Shepherd faces nightmares in Abaddon. As mysterious deaths occur around her, she discovers her connection to the Abaddon Hotel, Carmichael Manor, and decades of unexplained murders.
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A distributor pulled a pathetic stunt and asked people to not leave any negative reviews and pump up audience ratings to hide the fact that this movie SUCKS. I used to love the Hell House franchise but between the move away from FF and the actions of Terror Films I will never watch another one as long as I live. Absolutely pathetic and destroys the entire meaning of ratings and reviews.
I love the Hell House LLC movies. The original is probably my favorite found footage movie. While I enjoyed the second, I thought the third felt rushed and underwhelming, but Carmichael Manor was a great return to form, and the best since the original.
That's part of what makes the newest installment so incredibly disappointing.
Billed as the final installment in the series, Lineage is incredibly heavy on lore and info dumps, but none of that new information ever gets paid off in any way. The movie introduces a new piece of backstory to try to tie together deaths that didn't need tied together, but then never uses it to resolve the movie's plot or the greater story in general, instead cutting to the credits right when the final missing puzzle piece is about to be revealed.
Structurally, it feels like a film without a third act, which makes it feel overly long despite only being about an hour and forty-five minutes long. Our main protagonist's fear ramps up, but in place of a resolution, she only just begins to start putting puzzle pieces together. Meanwhile what the filmmakers seem to regard as the films third act is spent on side characters attempting to resolve the plot with zero involvement from the main character, while the main characater has a conversation with a new character who we don't have an attachment to and who doesn't expand our understanding of what's going on.
A location teased five minutes into the movie, returns in the last few minutes, but is never explained and ultimately has no real significance to the story other than a name drop to a character from earlier films. A minor character from prior films is revealed to be more involved than we knew, but there's no pay off too it. And there's a build up to a reveal that is implied to be incredibly important... that just never comes.
Honestly, it felt like everyone in the theater was sitting through the credits to see if there was a "to be continued" tag at the end, but it never came.
Overall this feels like an incredible misstep for what has generally been an incredibly solid series of films. I honestly cannot fathom how it was decided that this was how they were going to wrap up the story (by not wrapping up the story).
As a side note: I understand that the clown from the first film has become the series icon, but he felt incredibly overused here. Aside from an initial scene where he was used super effectively through traditional means of never showing him move, his regular movement throughout the rest of the movie combined with the fact that every scene was well lit, just removed any hint of terror from him. He stopped being creepy and just became a guy in a costume.
That's part of what makes the newest installment so incredibly disappointing.
Billed as the final installment in the series, Lineage is incredibly heavy on lore and info dumps, but none of that new information ever gets paid off in any way. The movie introduces a new piece of backstory to try to tie together deaths that didn't need tied together, but then never uses it to resolve the movie's plot or the greater story in general, instead cutting to the credits right when the final missing puzzle piece is about to be revealed.
Structurally, it feels like a film without a third act, which makes it feel overly long despite only being about an hour and forty-five minutes long. Our main protagonist's fear ramps up, but in place of a resolution, she only just begins to start putting puzzle pieces together. Meanwhile what the filmmakers seem to regard as the films third act is spent on side characters attempting to resolve the plot with zero involvement from the main character, while the main characater has a conversation with a new character who we don't have an attachment to and who doesn't expand our understanding of what's going on.
A location teased five minutes into the movie, returns in the last few minutes, but is never explained and ultimately has no real significance to the story other than a name drop to a character from earlier films. A minor character from prior films is revealed to be more involved than we knew, but there's no pay off too it. And there's a build up to a reveal that is implied to be incredibly important... that just never comes.
Honestly, it felt like everyone in the theater was sitting through the credits to see if there was a "to be continued" tag at the end, but it never came.
Overall this feels like an incredible misstep for what has generally been an incredibly solid series of films. I honestly cannot fathom how it was decided that this was how they were going to wrap up the story (by not wrapping up the story).
As a side note: I understand that the clown from the first film has become the series icon, but he felt incredibly overused here. Aside from an initial scene where he was used super effectively through traditional means of never showing him move, his regular movement throughout the rest of the movie combined with the fact that every scene was well lit, just removed any hint of terror from him. He stopped being creepy and just became a guy in a costume.
I'm honestly upset I paid to see this. It isn't even a complete movie. Despite being nearly two hours long, there's zero resolution. It's a bait ending that sets up for a conclusion, a conclusion I'm not at all looking forward to after this film.
There are a couple of creepy moments, but as far as standout scares, it's mostly been there, done that. All the cliches are present, including terrible writing and some equally bad acting. One scene in particular is so poorly written and pointless that I couldn't believe it made it past the cutting room floor. The dialogue was so bad at times, I wouldn't at all be surprised if I was told it was written by ChatGPT.
As a fan of these films, I'm really disappointed. I was lead to believe this would be the final film in the franchise, only to end with more questions than answers and a film that's little more than a montage of familiar scares and hanging plot threads.
There are a couple of creepy moments, but as far as standout scares, it's mostly been there, done that. All the cliches are present, including terrible writing and some equally bad acting. One scene in particular is so poorly written and pointless that I couldn't believe it made it past the cutting room floor. The dialogue was so bad at times, I wouldn't at all be surprised if I was told it was written by ChatGPT.
As a fan of these films, I'm really disappointed. I was lead to believe this would be the final film in the franchise, only to end with more questions than answers and a film that's little more than a montage of familiar scares and hanging plot threads.
If there is a Hell House LLC movie made after this one, I might change my tune about the quality of this film. Judging it as the final entry in the series, however, it is probably one of the worst endings to a horror franchise I've ever seen. Imagine if the Halloween franchise ended at Revenge or Curse, and even then that's being generous because those movies each had an actual climax point in their stories. This movie not only ends 2/3 of the way into its story, it ends at the point where the movie was starting to actually get interesting. Regardless of the negative feedback that this movie has gotten from me and others, I sincerely hope that Stephen Cognetti makes another movie to at least end the series on a less confusing note. Leaving the entire series on a cliffhanger is the most depressing outcome for the Hell House fans anticipating this release. As a standalone, I would probably rate it close to a 7/10, but judging it as the final entry unfortunately lowers it down to a 4/10.
I hardly leave reviews, but constantly rate, however I feel it my obligation to help others on this one. Hell House, LLC is one of the best scary movies in decades. This is a complete pile of garbage. DO NOT waste your time or money. Any highly rated review is absolutely fake. Slow, terrible, not scary, corny, poorly acted, poorly scored, pure trash.
New Horror Releases in August 2025
New Horror Releases in August 2025
Together is in theaters, "Alien: Earth" is coming to TV, and Weapons is coming soon. Here's everything new in the world of horror this August.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFirst film in the series that is not going to be filmed in found footage style.
- VerbindungenFollows Hell House LLC (2015)
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Details
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- Auch bekannt als
- Дом ада. Спуск к дьяволу
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Budget
- 175.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 308.826 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 152.884 $
- 24. Aug. 2025
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 308.826 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 48 Min.(108 min)
- Farbe
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