Cuando un pequeño pueblo cerca de la frontera entre Arizona y México es aniquilado de la noche a la mañana, las sospechas recaen sobre el único superviviente. Pero un rollo de fotos que tomó... Leer todoCuando un pequeño pueblo cerca de la frontera entre Arizona y México es aniquilado de la noche a la mañana, las sospechas recaen sobre el único superviviente. Pero un rollo de fotos que tomó el sobreviviente cuenta una historia diferente.Cuando un pequeño pueblo cerca de la frontera entre Arizona y México es aniquilado de la noche a la mañana, las sospechas recaen sobre el único superviviente. Pero un rollo de fotos que tomó el sobreviviente cuenta una historia diferente.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados en total
- Sheriff John Parano
- (as George Savage)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
As easy as it is to find dozens of bad examples of these kind of movies over the past few years, there have also been a few gems like THE CONSPIRACY and AFFLICTED that stand head and shoulders over the others and serve to demonstrate how much potential these kind of movies can have if they're done correctly.
I caught SAVAGELAND tonight as part of the New Orleans Horror Film Festival and, I'm happy to report, that it is definitely counts as another one of these "found-footage"/"fake documentary" gems that has, at least temporarily, restored my faith in that overplayed genre.
Told in news-footage/documentary style with the use of interviews, stock footage, etc., SAVAGELAND tells the story of the fictional massacre of an entire small Arizona border town and the one man, an illegal immigrant, arrested for the crime. But as more information and evidence comes to light, the audience is forced to delve deeper into the mystery of what really happened that night.
While I found the movie to be a little too long and repetitive in places, it is generally gripping and very intense. I also think the filmmakers may have given the answers away to the audience a little too easily and a little too soon in the movie, but as a whole, SAVAGELAND succeeds at using its' documentary format to draw you into the story and identify with the characters.
If you're like me and are constantly looking for a beacon of light at the end of the long tunnel of mediocre found-footage horror movies, I recommend checking out SAVAGELAND.
I love found footage movies so I'll throw it a 6/10. I can't see traditional viewers enjoying it. **The best part of the movie is an enlightening statement made by a photographer they're interviewing. He talks about the false sense of security you get when looking at scary events through a lens as it makes you feel detached and safe. A great point..logic that should apply to found footage films..kill that whole "why is he still filming complaint
Savageland is all about that. Taking place in the Bordertown of Sangre De Cristo, Arizona, which holds over 58 residents, but in one night, all 57 residents are killed, except for one man, a Mexican photographer named Francisco Salazar, who, in the eyes of the white man law, is quickly believed to be responsible for the killings of 57 people (yeah seriously), and he is on death row. Throughout his time in police custody and in court, he remains silent. The public response towards him is no better. Everyone is in a rage and wants his blood. All those innocent people, children including, were killed brutally and savagely in the hands of one monster. However, you know there is something that doesn't make sense about all of this. How could one man kill 57 people with a machete and pitchfork in one night? A single man managed to wipe out an entire town. You don't need to be a detective to know something is wrong.
But then they discovered his camera, which may tell a different story of what happened that night. The photos are a series of black and white photographs of the townspeople going mad and killing each other with extreme motion blur that makes them appear monstrous and deformed creatures from hell. They did a fantastic job with the photographs because they look terrifying, and you wonder what is happening. Some are hard to tell what you are looking at, and that alone is unnerving.
But did any of this happen, or is this a setup? Are the photos real or fake? Is Salazar lying or telling the truth? You will have to watch the movie to find out the answer.
The movie is a mockumentary, which uses fake interviews to give it some authenticity, making it appear that these are real people providing authentic interviews.
You know, after seeing many horror movies that reuse the same genre tropes, but when a movie comes along and does something different with the formula and does it well, its effect will stay with you long after it's over.
The fact that you never get a clear shot of the danger works really well. The out-of-focus, blurred images of the attackers prove much more unsettling than any direct shot might have done. The problem comes in when the viewer keeps watching in the hope of an explanation or something that at least ALLUDES to where the evil came from, just to be left with nothing when the credits roll.
The racism of the townsfolk compounds an already horrifying story. Well worth a watch, just don't expect to come out with anything resembling a sense of satisfaction. Great script let down by nameless evil.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaLen Wein, creator of Marvel's "Wolverine," plays Vietnam photographer Len Matheson, a combination of his first name, and second name of his favorite writer, Richard Matheson.
- Citas
Len Matheson: And suddenly, he stops being a historian, stops being an observer, and becomes an active participant. The moment he stopped being a photographer, and decided to do a single human action to save somebody else, is the moment that changed everything for him. You give up being a photographer, and you become a human being, and you lose what has kept you alive and safe through the rest of the process.
Selecciones populares
- How long is Savageland?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 22 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1