Dalia y sus dos hermanas pequeñas han crecido en una secta. La noche de un importante ritual, una redada policial rescata a Dalia mientras los miembros del culto huyen con sus dos hermanas.Dalia y sus dos hermanas pequeñas han crecido en una secta. La noche de un importante ritual, una redada policial rescata a Dalia mientras los miembros del culto huyen con sus dos hermanas.Dalia y sus dos hermanas pequeñas han crecido en una secta. La noche de un importante ritual, una redada policial rescata a Dalia mientras los miembros del culto huyen con sus dos hermanas.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 1 nominación en total
Opiniones destacadas
Plot
Dalia and her two young sisters grow up in a pagan apocalyptic cult led by an ancient Baltic goddess of death and reincarnation. On the night of an important cult ritual, a police raid rescues Dalia as cult members flee with her two sisters. Years later, as the guilt eats away at her, Dalia finds a potential link to the cult through a prominent and despised black metal artist sequestered in the woods. Dalia journeys to find her sisters but her quest for the truth becomes a descent into Hell.
Cast
Not familiar with anybody involved
Verdict
An Australian ITN movie, Cult Girls embraces gothic culture. Sadly by people either too deep into it or with no clue, because it's a terrible representation.
If you can get past that you're hit with the films biggest flaw, it's boring. No, I haven't stressed it enough this movie is incredibly boring. I struggled to make it through the runtime, I actually felt my eyes beginning to close, I was so horrifyingly bored watching Cult Girls.
Why? Well the plot is not only dull but it's non-sensical. You can't engage because it makes no sense, neither can you care about the characters because they're so grey and simply uninteresting.
I'll wind up making an ITN list, I expect this to be at the absolute bottom and considering what else will be on the list that's embarassing.
Rants
Who are ITN films for? Very low budget, often featuring the same cast who oddly never seem to change their appearance in the slightest. The writing is always dire, the visual effects are lacking and they always feel so terribly amateurish. Is it intentional? Are they the new Scyfy and/or Asylum? Truly abysmal stuff to a consistency that is quite impressive.
The Good
Nothing springs to mind
The Bad
So very very boring Plot makes little sense Nothing really happens Everything is so forgettable.
Dalia and her two young sisters grow up in a pagan apocalyptic cult led by an ancient Baltic goddess of death and reincarnation. On the night of an important cult ritual, a police raid rescues Dalia as cult members flee with her two sisters. Years later, as the guilt eats away at her, Dalia finds a potential link to the cult through a prominent and despised black metal artist sequestered in the woods. Dalia journeys to find her sisters but her quest for the truth becomes a descent into Hell.
Cast
Not familiar with anybody involved
Verdict
An Australian ITN movie, Cult Girls embraces gothic culture. Sadly by people either too deep into it or with no clue, because it's a terrible representation.
If you can get past that you're hit with the films biggest flaw, it's boring. No, I haven't stressed it enough this movie is incredibly boring. I struggled to make it through the runtime, I actually felt my eyes beginning to close, I was so horrifyingly bored watching Cult Girls.
Why? Well the plot is not only dull but it's non-sensical. You can't engage because it makes no sense, neither can you care about the characters because they're so grey and simply uninteresting.
I'll wind up making an ITN list, I expect this to be at the absolute bottom and considering what else will be on the list that's embarassing.
Rants
Who are ITN films for? Very low budget, often featuring the same cast who oddly never seem to change their appearance in the slightest. The writing is always dire, the visual effects are lacking and they always feel so terribly amateurish. Is it intentional? Are they the new Scyfy and/or Asylum? Truly abysmal stuff to a consistency that is quite impressive.
The Good
Nothing springs to mind
The Bad
So very very boring Plot makes little sense Nothing really happens Everything is so forgettable.
What a great joy it was to watch this film. The director Mark Bakaitas has a great visual style and it shows wondefully well in this film. Fantastic mesmerising performance by Jane Badler. All the main performances were also great. A great indy Aussie film.
The music is so loud and overbearing -- prominently by chants -- that, without a subtitles option (of which there isn't one) it makes it extremely difficult to hear what the characters are actually saying (the monk (?) just sounds as though he's mumbling ... and the other characters / actors, you can't tell what they're saying at all. I turned the film off barely five minutes in due to this issue.
The key "inconsistency" is also that the opening statement claims that the events tak place in "Europe in the 13th century ... the last place to be Christianisized" (not even a real word): but takes place in "Terra Australis" (ok ...), and where -- for the 13th century -- obviously white people (of which there weren't any) had electronic lamps and school halls ...There is no contradiction to this supposition, and the film never states differences / otherwise.
Honestly: don't watch this (ahem) "horror"
The key "inconsistency" is also that the opening statement claims that the events tak place in "Europe in the 13th century ... the last place to be Christianisized" (not even a real word): but takes place in "Terra Australis" (ok ...), and where -- for the 13th century -- obviously white people (of which there weren't any) had electronic lamps and school halls ...There is no contradiction to this supposition, and the film never states differences / otherwise.
Honestly: don't watch this (ahem) "horror"
Pros: Nice scenery and aerial shots, the chants sound great, few locations are recognisable, nudity, costume design and theme.
Cons: It's a mess. You could cut it up into 20 minute sections and rearrange them in any order to produce a similar outcome. It's impossible to spoil this movie because I'm not sure what happened. Something about sisters in a cult I think.
Cult Girls is, well, an abomination of a film. It was written and directed by Mark Bakaitis. Bakaitis is no fool, holding a swag of awards for video clips. Yet somehow this hotch-potch which is light on surrealism, heavy on eroticism and rife with a clumsy sort gothic horror bears none of the grace and inventiveness of his video clip work.
The plot, such as it is, sees Dalia and her two sisters grow up in a heavy metal apocalyptic sect. She escapes and authorities break up the sect - or appear to. The sect manifests again and the sisters venture into it to hopefully reunite. I gather it is some sort of cheapish Inferno.
The dialogue is stilted, the acting porcine like (hammy), the direction limp when a firm grasp was required, and cinematography stuck on muted dull shades of misery. This is not a good film.
Some reviewers have thrown the phrase 'pagan' or 'folk' horror about in relation to the film. This project is as much folk horror (FH) as it is worthy of a 10. Both are improbable to the point of nonsense. FH is typically set in a rural environment, has one or more innocents, taps into some sort established pagan structure, Lovecraftian is popular, and so on. Cult Girls meets none of the criteria often used to define the genre and bears no resemblance at all to the Wicker Man or The Colour of Space.
The very last line in the film mentions Ragana, a witch from Latvian / Lithuanian mythology. Perhaps if they had started here and developed Ragana by name as much more explicit and integral to events within the movie they may have salvaged something. But they didn't.
The anti-Christian theme is tackled, for instance, in the ritualized anointing of naked girls into, well, into whatever it is they are being anointed into. Christian sacraments are rigorously prescribed and deeply embedded in their particular tradition. The ritualized anointing in this film is nothing more than a left over from the tacky and nasty groping of the old T&A days of Ozploitation. That is to say, an opportunity to expose a little more gratuitous T&A.
One of the many issues with the film is that there is simply too much of everything: plot twists, music changes, characters, settings, scene shifts, gratuitous nudity, etc, etc. It's American but the film, They Remain, is a lesson in successful minimalist Folk Horror, minimalist in all areas including stretching a limited, minimalist, budget.
The setting fluctuates between Germany, Lithuania and some of Melbourne's industrial wastelands. I suspect it's mainly Melbourne and environs with a bit of fortuitous holiday footage thrown in. Buildings adorned with graffiti are generic as is mega death heavy metal droning and whining in the background. There is occasional and enchanting Celtic cantillating that is lovely to listen to and pushes beyond the incessant aural clichés.
I usually give credit for intent. No one goes into the making a movie with the intent of making a bad one. Budget, politics, and abilities - various other factors come into play. I'm not so certain here. It's just possible that director Mark Bakaitis wanted to be first over the line with a new wave Australian FH; first over the line at any cost. (Films like The Wave, though not 'new wave' unfortunately, confirm him as too late.)
The plot, such as it is, sees Dalia and her two sisters grow up in a heavy metal apocalyptic sect. She escapes and authorities break up the sect - or appear to. The sect manifests again and the sisters venture into it to hopefully reunite. I gather it is some sort of cheapish Inferno.
The dialogue is stilted, the acting porcine like (hammy), the direction limp when a firm grasp was required, and cinematography stuck on muted dull shades of misery. This is not a good film.
Some reviewers have thrown the phrase 'pagan' or 'folk' horror about in relation to the film. This project is as much folk horror (FH) as it is worthy of a 10. Both are improbable to the point of nonsense. FH is typically set in a rural environment, has one or more innocents, taps into some sort established pagan structure, Lovecraftian is popular, and so on. Cult Girls meets none of the criteria often used to define the genre and bears no resemblance at all to the Wicker Man or The Colour of Space.
The very last line in the film mentions Ragana, a witch from Latvian / Lithuanian mythology. Perhaps if they had started here and developed Ragana by name as much more explicit and integral to events within the movie they may have salvaged something. But they didn't.
The anti-Christian theme is tackled, for instance, in the ritualized anointing of naked girls into, well, into whatever it is they are being anointed into. Christian sacraments are rigorously prescribed and deeply embedded in their particular tradition. The ritualized anointing in this film is nothing more than a left over from the tacky and nasty groping of the old T&A days of Ozploitation. That is to say, an opportunity to expose a little more gratuitous T&A.
One of the many issues with the film is that there is simply too much of everything: plot twists, music changes, characters, settings, scene shifts, gratuitous nudity, etc, etc. It's American but the film, They Remain, is a lesson in successful minimalist Folk Horror, minimalist in all areas including stretching a limited, minimalist, budget.
The setting fluctuates between Germany, Lithuania and some of Melbourne's industrial wastelands. I suspect it's mainly Melbourne and environs with a bit of fortuitous holiday footage thrown in. Buildings adorned with graffiti are generic as is mega death heavy metal droning and whining in the background. There is occasional and enchanting Celtic cantillating that is lovely to listen to and pushes beyond the incessant aural clichés.
I usually give credit for intent. No one goes into the making a movie with the intent of making a bad one. Budget, politics, and abilities - various other factors come into play. I'm not so certain here. It's just possible that director Mark Bakaitis wanted to be first over the line with a new wave Australian FH; first over the line at any cost. (Films like The Wave, though not 'new wave' unfortunately, confirm him as too late.)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 23 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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