Deux soeurs se disputent les affections d'un homme qui pourrait être un vampire.Deux soeurs se disputent les affections d'un homme qui pourrait être un vampire.Deux soeurs se disputent les affections d'un homme qui pourrait être un vampire.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 7 victoires et 4 nominations au total
Avis à la une
It's not really a horror or a mystery. More like an episode of Days of Our Lives set in The Twilight Zone. The 70s vibe is perfect in every way. I'd generally prefer something with more horror, action or bizarre narrative, like Terry Gilliam's work, but Climate of the Hunter is well made and offers something different.
Alma (Ginger Gilmartin) and her sister Elizabeth (Mary Buss) welcome their friend Wesley (Ben Hall) after twenty years absence at a remote house in the woods. Wesley could be a vampire. They are joined by Wesley's son after father and son have a strange discussion about Wesley's wife.
My favorite scene is the son reading his story to the group. It is the highlight of the movie. It is awkward, strange, and intense. I would have liked for the movie to finish off over that night. The situation is not going to get any better than that. It is creepy and disturbing at the moment. The movie needs to milk that and finish it off with mounting intensity.
My favorite scene is the son reading his story to the group. It is the highlight of the movie. It is awkward, strange, and intense. I would have liked for the movie to finish off over that night. The situation is not going to get any better than that. It is creepy and disturbing at the moment. The movie needs to milk that and finish it off with mounting intensity.
Three middle aged persons meet after two decades ;each of them lives a complex life. The man has a defiant son, his sick wife gets into a mental institution, he returns to the place of his childhood. One of the two sisters remains unmarried, the other one suffers from disorders, abandoned by husband, has a daughter who is planning for having a child.
It is the skill of the various people that enable a simple story into a horror mystery that reminds me of the 70's and 80's Jean Rollin films, they are fantasies in which story gets into backside, we see lively paintings before us.
It is the skill of the various people that enable a simple story into a horror mystery that reminds me of the 70's and 80's Jean Rollin films, they are fantasies in which story gets into backside, we see lively paintings before us.
There's not many perfect films in the world but this is one of them.
From wardrobe to dialogue to acting to music to direction to cinematography to, well, everything.
It fails in no area.
The tone is perfectly absurd, kitschy, beautiful and dense. The writing is serious, comical, mysterious and magical. It's everything an independent film should be.
I happen to like movies in which people talk a lot and speak in a way that people don't really speak. Relationship movies that unfold. I stumbled on this on AMC Plus and I'm glad I did. What a weird, uncomfortable, but intriguing movie. The first flashback with the wife and the son is super creepy. Nice use of washed out green tones in that scene, like a 90s Japanese horror movie. I don't want to spoil too much and it's hard to get to the character count without doing it so I'll just say I also appreciate these kinds of indie films in which you don't recognize the actors from anything. It's easier to believe they are really the characters.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesReece's fourth collaboration with Mary Buss
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 22min(82 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 4:3
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