The Death That Awaits
- 2024
- 1h 42min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
5,5/10
1,2 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaA drifter searching for answers to a mystery from her past takes on a job looking after a sick teen who is undergoing a mysterious transformation her family will do anything to stop.A drifter searching for answers to a mystery from her past takes on a job looking after a sick teen who is undergoing a mysterious transformation her family will do anything to stop.A drifter searching for answers to a mystery from her past takes on a job looking after a sick teen who is undergoing a mysterious transformation her family will do anything to stop.
- Premios
- 1 premio en total
Reseñas destacadas
I read the two previous reviews and was a bit dubious. One called it something a turd had landed on and the other called it a hidden gem.
So I felt I had to give it a looksie and see what this was all about. So if you like the Mayfair witches and Twilight this will be your kind of film. Basically along the same vibes as Buffy the vampire slayer and charmed. Nothing new here and the story had far too many holes in it. I did watch it to the end and was more dissapointed in this whole film than thinking it was a hidden gem. Maybe it's because this whole female vampire/witch chick flick concept has been used more in my lifetime of film watching than most other concepts.
But if you want to waste a bit of time on a rainy afternoon this is not the worst choice. I give it 5 stars. Nothing worth watching more than once and certainly nothing to add to top films to recommend but not a complete waste of a film like some directors outputs out there. Some will certainly enjoy this more than me.
So I felt I had to give it a looksie and see what this was all about. So if you like the Mayfair witches and Twilight this will be your kind of film. Basically along the same vibes as Buffy the vampire slayer and charmed. Nothing new here and the story had far too many holes in it. I did watch it to the end and was more dissapointed in this whole film than thinking it was a hidden gem. Maybe it's because this whole female vampire/witch chick flick concept has been used more in my lifetime of film watching than most other concepts.
But if you want to waste a bit of time on a rainy afternoon this is not the worst choice. I give it 5 stars. Nothing worth watching more than once and certainly nothing to add to top films to recommend but not a complete waste of a film like some directors outputs out there. Some will certainly enjoy this more than me.
No pun intended - if you are responsible for the well being of another human being ... well you should take that job serious. On the other hand if you yourself have mental ... let's call them issues ... well it can be hard to say the least.
An interesting concept and thriller overall, with some neat little twists and turns in the story. Actors are more than decent and there are enough scares to keep you going ... story wise it is ok too. For a low budget effort well done - at least from my perspective.
An interesting concept and thriller overall, with some neat little twists and turns in the story. Actors are more than decent and there are enough scares to keep you going ... story wise it is ok too. For a low budget effort well done - at least from my perspective.
"The Death that Awaits" proves that marketing can be the first misstep in a film's journey to its audience. Billed as a slow-burn horror, this 102-minute feature ultimately delivers neither the promised horror elements nor enough dramatic tension to justify its glacial pacing.
The film follows a drifter who takes a position caring for a mysteriously ill teenager in the countryside, but the intrigue suggested by this premise never fully materializes. While the technical elements are competent - the RED cameras capture the rural setting with appropriate atmosphere, and the Zeiss lenses lend a classical cinematic quality to the visuals - these production values feel wasted on a story that struggles to find its identity.
The transformation subplot, which should serve as the narrative's driving force, unfolds with such restraint that it borders on inertia. The parents' supposedly sinister efforts to prevent this change lack the urgency or menace needed to generate genuine suspense. While the actors deliver serviceable performances, they're hampered by a script that mistakes silence for substance and slowness for sophistication.
Most problematic is the film's horror classification. Viewers expecting genre thrills will find themselves waiting for scares that never arrive. This mismarketing does a disservice to both the film and its audience, as "The Death that Awaits" might have found a more appreciative viewership if positioned as a straight drama about family secrets and rural isolation.
The production values and competent performances suggest this could have found a comfortable home as a made-for-television feature, where expectations might better align with its modest ambitions. Instead, it exists in an uncomfortable limbo - too subdued for horror fans, too slight for art-house audiences, and too languid for mainstream viewers seeking entertainment. Sometimes the death that awaits is simply the slow expiration of audience interest.
The film follows a drifter who takes a position caring for a mysteriously ill teenager in the countryside, but the intrigue suggested by this premise never fully materializes. While the technical elements are competent - the RED cameras capture the rural setting with appropriate atmosphere, and the Zeiss lenses lend a classical cinematic quality to the visuals - these production values feel wasted on a story that struggles to find its identity.
The transformation subplot, which should serve as the narrative's driving force, unfolds with such restraint that it borders on inertia. The parents' supposedly sinister efforts to prevent this change lack the urgency or menace needed to generate genuine suspense. While the actors deliver serviceable performances, they're hampered by a script that mistakes silence for substance and slowness for sophistication.
Most problematic is the film's horror classification. Viewers expecting genre thrills will find themselves waiting for scares that never arrive. This mismarketing does a disservice to both the film and its audience, as "The Death that Awaits" might have found a more appreciative viewership if positioned as a straight drama about family secrets and rural isolation.
The production values and competent performances suggest this could have found a comfortable home as a made-for-television feature, where expectations might better align with its modest ambitions. Instead, it exists in an uncomfortable limbo - too subdued for horror fans, too slight for art-house audiences, and too languid for mainstream viewers seeking entertainment. Sometimes the death that awaits is simply the slow expiration of audience interest.
I had never actually heard about the 2024 movie "The Death That Awaits", from writer Rachel Kiley and director Richard J. Lee, prior to stumbling upon it by random chance here in 2025. And with it being a movie that I had neither seen, nor heard about, of course I opted to give the movie a fair chance.
The storyline in the movie was insanely slow paced, sluggish and sort of just felt utterly irrelevant. And I have to say I had entirely zoned out 35 minutes into the ordeal. I virtually had no idea what was going on, well, in fact nothing was going on. But whatever wasn't going on in the storyline made little sense, and it was paced so slowly that even a snail would complain about it. So writer Rachel Kiley failed to deliver a script for the movie that entertained me.
I was not familiar with the cast ensemble in the movie, except for actor Paul Johansson, and that was actually something that worked in favor of the movie, as I enjoy watching new and unfamiliar talents on the screen. Not that it really mattered, because the actresses and actors had nothing to work with in terms of an interesting or entertaining script.
"The Death That Awaits" failed to entertain me, and this is definitely not a movie that I would recommend you to waste 102 minutes on watching. Nor is it a movie that will grace my screen a second time.
My rating of director Richard J. Lee's 2024 movie "The Death That Awaits" lands on a generous two out of ten stars.
The storyline in the movie was insanely slow paced, sluggish and sort of just felt utterly irrelevant. And I have to say I had entirely zoned out 35 minutes into the ordeal. I virtually had no idea what was going on, well, in fact nothing was going on. But whatever wasn't going on in the storyline made little sense, and it was paced so slowly that even a snail would complain about it. So writer Rachel Kiley failed to deliver a script for the movie that entertained me.
I was not familiar with the cast ensemble in the movie, except for actor Paul Johansson, and that was actually something that worked in favor of the movie, as I enjoy watching new and unfamiliar talents on the screen. Not that it really mattered, because the actresses and actors had nothing to work with in terms of an interesting or entertaining script.
"The Death That Awaits" failed to entertain me, and this is definitely not a movie that I would recommend you to waste 102 minutes on watching. Nor is it a movie that will grace my screen a second time.
My rating of director Richard J. Lee's 2024 movie "The Death That Awaits" lands on a generous two out of ten stars.
So, there was only 1 review left here before watching this movie. Having read the reviewer might have found a 'little gem' (agreed!) I was IN to watch. But then they wrote that the ending wasn't up to their expectations.
I LOVED the whole movie... As Is.
Maybe I enjoyed the ending because I had lowered my expectations after reading this other review.
(I usually do not read reviews due to so many reviewers SPOILing even minor plots or mentioning that there ARE 'twists' within, without the red colored font revealing the need to watch for spoilers! Argh!!! Added this in to meet the character minimum) So. I agree!
Great Little Gem.
Its been 24 hours since I watched this movie and I'm going to watch it again right now!
I Loved the ending as it is.
I LOVED the whole movie... As Is.
Maybe I enjoyed the ending because I had lowered my expectations after reading this other review.
(I usually do not read reviews due to so many reviewers SPOILing even minor plots or mentioning that there ARE 'twists' within, without the red colored font revealing the need to watch for spoilers! Argh!!! Added this in to meet the character minimum) So. I agree!
Great Little Gem.
Its been 24 hours since I watched this movie and I'm going to watch it again right now!
I Loved the ending as it is.
¿Sabías que...?
- Banda sonoraBarracuda
Written by Ann Wilson, Roger Fisher, Nancy Wilson, Michael Derosier
Performed by Heart
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Зло: Новая глава
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 42 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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