The Surrender
- 2025
- 1 Std. 36 Min.
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuWhen the family patriarch dies, a grieving mother and daughter risk their lives to perform a brutal resurrection ritual and bring him back from the dead.When the family patriarch dies, a grieving mother and daughter risk their lives to perform a brutal resurrection ritual and bring him back from the dead.When the family patriarch dies, a grieving mother and daughter risk their lives to perform a brutal resurrection ritual and bring him back from the dead.
Lola Prince Kelly
- Alexa
- (as Lola Kelly)
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I went into this flick with fairly low expectations and was pleasantly surprised, even though it doesn't quite stick the landing in the end. We follow Colby Minifie, who is visiting her parents' house after her father becomes ill and eventually dies. With a rather difficult relationship with her mother, she now tries to reconnect with her. However, her mother is planning to perform a resurrection ritual, and things obviously don't go as planned.
Let me start off by saying that I would love to see Colby Minifie in more projects. I already really liked her in The Boys, and here she does a commendable job as well. She is able to convey the emotional weight packed into this film but also has great comedic timing and an overall unique screen presence. Her mother, played by Kate Burton, was also convincing and portrayed the role of a grieving woman desperate to bring her husband back very well.
The movie starts off rather slow, exploring the family dynamics by combining emotional depth with small comedic moments. The mixture overall works well and pulls the audience into the narrative. Once the ritual begins, the first harrowing moments occur, and the movie picks up the pace slightly. Despite the slow pacing and dialogue-driven opening, it never gets boring.
When they finish the ritual, I was hoping for the grand finale that had been teased in the film's earlier moments. The tone completely shifts, and the setting becomes almost otherworldly, with the characters trapped inside a protective circle surrounded by nothing but black. It creates a tense and eerie atmosphere.
Without spoiling the ending, I have to say I wasn't fully satisfied with the film's conclusion. Sadly, the ending is often the most memorable part of a movie, and with this one showing such potential, it's disappointing that it didn't quite stick the landing. Still, it's a decent horror film that explores familiar themes in a unique and interesting way, even if it doesn't deliver anything particularly memorable in the end. I enjoyed the final product, but I couldn't help but leave feeling a little unsatisfied. [5.8/10]
Let me start off by saying that I would love to see Colby Minifie in more projects. I already really liked her in The Boys, and here she does a commendable job as well. She is able to convey the emotional weight packed into this film but also has great comedic timing and an overall unique screen presence. Her mother, played by Kate Burton, was also convincing and portrayed the role of a grieving woman desperate to bring her husband back very well.
The movie starts off rather slow, exploring the family dynamics by combining emotional depth with small comedic moments. The mixture overall works well and pulls the audience into the narrative. Once the ritual begins, the first harrowing moments occur, and the movie picks up the pace slightly. Despite the slow pacing and dialogue-driven opening, it never gets boring.
When they finish the ritual, I was hoping for the grand finale that had been teased in the film's earlier moments. The tone completely shifts, and the setting becomes almost otherworldly, with the characters trapped inside a protective circle surrounded by nothing but black. It creates a tense and eerie atmosphere.
Without spoiling the ending, I have to say I wasn't fully satisfied with the film's conclusion. Sadly, the ending is often the most memorable part of a movie, and with this one showing such potential, it's disappointing that it didn't quite stick the landing. Still, it's a decent horror film that explores familiar themes in a unique and interesting way, even if it doesn't deliver anything particularly memorable in the end. I enjoyed the final product, but I couldn't help but leave feeling a little unsatisfied. [5.8/10]
But there's something about Julie Max's first direct debut "The Surrender" that delves deeper into the darker sides of the human psyche, exploring the different impacts of what it's like for two people to experience a void from the same common denominator. In reality, you could look at this film is contained for its benefit. It's confined to a couple of indoor spaces with four characters. At the most annoying fracture is a mother/daughter relationship. How many times did the daughter called her (mom)? The entire film? Is very annoying, get this the ending of the movie will feel like it needs about 10 more minutes of the story and unfortunately 91 minutes without the credits went by fast. So I am rating this a 5.6/10 because the first time director should give massive credit to her work she'd accomplish.
I went in not expecting much and was very pleasantly surprised. It kept our attention for the entire length of the film, which is something most recent horror movies have been unable to do.
Excellent performances from Colby Minife and Kate Burton. Their chemistry was just right, and both played effortlessly off each other.
The movie was fast paced, the cinematography was beautiful and captivating.
If you liked A Dark Song and Anything For Jackson, you might enjoy this movie. It combines elements of both while retaining some uniqueness.
My only gripe is, much like A Dark Song, the final act was lackluster. The ending was rather abrupt and clunky. It would've been nice to see it fleshed out a little more.
Still, overall, a solid watch.
Excellent performances from Colby Minife and Kate Burton. Their chemistry was just right, and both played effortlessly off each other.
The movie was fast paced, the cinematography was beautiful and captivating.
If you liked A Dark Song and Anything For Jackson, you might enjoy this movie. It combines elements of both while retaining some uniqueness.
My only gripe is, much like A Dark Song, the final act was lackluster. The ending was rather abrupt and clunky. It would've been nice to see it fleshed out a little more.
Still, overall, a solid watch.
Sometimes a movie night throws you a curveball, and this was one of those times. The crew-Willow, Amy, Tails, Knuckles, and Shadow-went in completely blind for The Surrender, thinking we were just in for another spooky horror ride. The only thing we knew? It had something to do with a ritual. Sounded promising, right? Well, it was... sort of.
The idea behind the film is honestly pretty captivating: a family ritual where you're asked to "surrender" to something beyond life-spiritual, emotional, and frighteningly real. That was enough to get all of us hooked early on. But when the movie dives deeper into this ritual, especially surrounding the death of the father, it starts raising the question: why not just let the man rest in peace? Still, we knew if that happened, there'd be no movie.
Things escalate fast when the supernatural elements kick in. It is a scary movie-no doubt about it. Tails literally tapped out mid-way through when the intensity cranked up (no spoilers, but it got wild). Willow, Knuckles, and Shadow were vibing with the thrills, but both Knuckles and Shadow called out the main character for being kind of weak in those monster scenes. They joked she could've taken them down with half the effort if she actually tried. Classic.
Amy, on the other hand, got pulled in deep once the ritual scenes started going dark. Like, real dark. She was tense throughout-especially when the blood came into play-and said the ritual arc was easily her favorite part, even if it creeped her out. Honestly, same.
But here's where the movie kind of lost all of us: the pacing and the emotional drama. There's a lot of back-and-forth between the two main characters, and while we get it's meant to show grief and trauma, it felt repetitive and dragged out. The emotional weight just didn't land like it should have. The story kind of stumbled in building the supernatural world, too-like, the ritual was cool, but why it happened and what it really meant? That part was foggy and undercooked.
By the time it wrapped up, we all agreed it was fun to experience together, especially in the dark with the volume up. It had moments-definitely creepy, visually strong at times-but as a full package, it didn't live up to what the concept deserved.
Final score from the crew: 4/10. Cool idea, scary at parts, but not quite the horror gem we hoped for.
The idea behind the film is honestly pretty captivating: a family ritual where you're asked to "surrender" to something beyond life-spiritual, emotional, and frighteningly real. That was enough to get all of us hooked early on. But when the movie dives deeper into this ritual, especially surrounding the death of the father, it starts raising the question: why not just let the man rest in peace? Still, we knew if that happened, there'd be no movie.
Things escalate fast when the supernatural elements kick in. It is a scary movie-no doubt about it. Tails literally tapped out mid-way through when the intensity cranked up (no spoilers, but it got wild). Willow, Knuckles, and Shadow were vibing with the thrills, but both Knuckles and Shadow called out the main character for being kind of weak in those monster scenes. They joked she could've taken them down with half the effort if she actually tried. Classic.
Amy, on the other hand, got pulled in deep once the ritual scenes started going dark. Like, real dark. She was tense throughout-especially when the blood came into play-and said the ritual arc was easily her favorite part, even if it creeped her out. Honestly, same.
But here's where the movie kind of lost all of us: the pacing and the emotional drama. There's a lot of back-and-forth between the two main characters, and while we get it's meant to show grief and trauma, it felt repetitive and dragged out. The emotional weight just didn't land like it should have. The story kind of stumbled in building the supernatural world, too-like, the ritual was cool, but why it happened and what it really meant? That part was foggy and undercooked.
By the time it wrapped up, we all agreed it was fun to experience together, especially in the dark with the volume up. It had moments-definitely creepy, visually strong at times-but as a full package, it didn't live up to what the concept deserved.
Final score from the crew: 4/10. Cool idea, scary at parts, but not quite the horror gem we hoped for.
I strongly believe this movie deserves at least 6/10. Reminds me a lot of 'A Dark Song', which I think is also hugely underrated.
Here's why I liked this movie: 1) Perfect cast and acting. I notice these things. This movie is mostly played by just 2 actresses - and they do a brilliant job. That mom character got me angry like 3 seconds into the movie - too realistic!
2) Great canonical setup. The atmoshere, the ritual, the 'other place' - nicely done!
3) No unreasonable dialogue, no dumb actions (unexplained that is), no childish behavior, story is not driven by some unreasonable or unbelievable desires.
4) Its not drawn-out. Pace is good.
5) Execution, operator work, little CGI, costumes, decorations - production quality is high. I say that considering that Shudder usually produces low budget movies, yet this visually looks on par with any other movies out there. Dare I say it, nowadays many even 50million+ movies tend to look awful, unprofessional. This one on the contrary - delivers quality where it matters. Picture is simply pleasant to watch.
6) Drama is real, life-like, a tragedy, definetely comes from someone who experienced it, otherwise I don't know how they got it to be so precise.
Obviously there are also weak parts: 1) Story. The end is too abrupt. While it leaves room for speculation, it lacks build up, it lacks proper culmination, it lacks revelation. All these things could've been there with just a little push.
2) Horror. I get the grief, I get the manifestation, I know, this story is probably less about plain horror and more about one person's tragedy, and the drama surrounding it, but I'm just such a fan of a horror, I really want some detail to that part too, I want the theme to be explored and/or at least some clues to what exactly is happening. Yeah...
Overall, I was REALLY pleasently surprised.
This movie resonated with me.
But then a bit dissappointed too, I guess.
I understand the pain, all the pain in this one - I can understand all of it to it's depth - and its brilliantly portrayed.
But yet you've also made an attempt to involve more than that into this movie - a horror, a devil, an another world - and I was hoping for more of that. And I was also hoping for a resolution that wouldn't be so silent. The clearly was some room for that, why didn't it happen?!
Here's why I liked this movie: 1) Perfect cast and acting. I notice these things. This movie is mostly played by just 2 actresses - and they do a brilliant job. That mom character got me angry like 3 seconds into the movie - too realistic!
2) Great canonical setup. The atmoshere, the ritual, the 'other place' - nicely done!
3) No unreasonable dialogue, no dumb actions (unexplained that is), no childish behavior, story is not driven by some unreasonable or unbelievable desires.
4) Its not drawn-out. Pace is good.
5) Execution, operator work, little CGI, costumes, decorations - production quality is high. I say that considering that Shudder usually produces low budget movies, yet this visually looks on par with any other movies out there. Dare I say it, nowadays many even 50million+ movies tend to look awful, unprofessional. This one on the contrary - delivers quality where it matters. Picture is simply pleasant to watch.
6) Drama is real, life-like, a tragedy, definetely comes from someone who experienced it, otherwise I don't know how they got it to be so precise.
Obviously there are also weak parts: 1) Story. The end is too abrupt. While it leaves room for speculation, it lacks build up, it lacks proper culmination, it lacks revelation. All these things could've been there with just a little push.
2) Horror. I get the grief, I get the manifestation, I know, this story is probably less about plain horror and more about one person's tragedy, and the drama surrounding it, but I'm just such a fan of a horror, I really want some detail to that part too, I want the theme to be explored and/or at least some clues to what exactly is happening. Yeah...
Overall, I was REALLY pleasently surprised.
This movie resonated with me.
But then a bit dissappointed too, I guess.
I understand the pain, all the pain in this one - I can understand all of it to it's depth - and its brilliantly portrayed.
But yet you've also made an attempt to involve more than that into this movie - a horror, a devil, an another world - and I was hoping for more of that. And I was also hoping for a resolution that wouldn't be so silent. The clearly was some room for that, why didn't it happen?!
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- Отречение
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 36 Minuten
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