Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA woman released from a mental hospital questions her sanity after she hears strange voices in the country manor she has moved into with her husband.A woman released from a mental hospital questions her sanity after she hears strange voices in the country manor she has moved into with her husband.A woman released from a mental hospital questions her sanity after she hears strange voices in the country manor she has moved into with her husband.
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Although the other reviewers of Voices seemed to have liked it, I found this stagebound drama to be a bore.
While on a boating vacation, a young boy disappears. He is assumed to have drown. The boy's parents (David Hemmings and Gayle Hunnicutt) were making love when the boy wandered off, so a strong feeling of guilt hangs over the surviving couple. Claire, the mother, eventually has to be committed after trying to kill herself. Just out of the hospital, the husband, Robert, has taken her to country to get away. While in the hospital, Claire inherited a country manor. The house is dusty and a dense fog hovers outside the house. However, the atmosphere is more chilly between the couple, who repeatedly reopen old wounds. Then, there is the matter of the voices that Claire is hearing in the house. Is the house haunted or is her illness back or is there something else going on?
Admittedly, I started watching Voices thinking it was a horror film, which it is not, but I had a hard time finishing the film, in spite of its short running time. Based on a play, Voices is a talkfest where a couple bickers endlessly until there is a surprise ending, and this one does not seem too surprising any more. Admittedly, David Hemmings and Gayle Hunnicutt are both fine and any interest that I had was because of their performances, but, after a while, I just wanted them both to shut up. I will confess to not liking movies (or plays) like this. I did care much for The Pumpkin Eater or Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? either. Viewers with more patience for that type of drama may like Voices more than I did.
While on a boating vacation, a young boy disappears. He is assumed to have drown. The boy's parents (David Hemmings and Gayle Hunnicutt) were making love when the boy wandered off, so a strong feeling of guilt hangs over the surviving couple. Claire, the mother, eventually has to be committed after trying to kill herself. Just out of the hospital, the husband, Robert, has taken her to country to get away. While in the hospital, Claire inherited a country manor. The house is dusty and a dense fog hovers outside the house. However, the atmosphere is more chilly between the couple, who repeatedly reopen old wounds. Then, there is the matter of the voices that Claire is hearing in the house. Is the house haunted or is her illness back or is there something else going on?
Admittedly, I started watching Voices thinking it was a horror film, which it is not, but I had a hard time finishing the film, in spite of its short running time. Based on a play, Voices is a talkfest where a couple bickers endlessly until there is a surprise ending, and this one does not seem too surprising any more. Admittedly, David Hemmings and Gayle Hunnicutt are both fine and any interest that I had was because of their performances, but, after a while, I just wanted them both to shut up. I will confess to not liking movies (or plays) like this. I did care much for The Pumpkin Eater or Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? either. Viewers with more patience for that type of drama may like Voices more than I did.
Rather dreary British-made ghost story involves a bickering couple hoping to restart their marriage after a long period of mourning over the death of their child, who drowned while on a family outing at the lake. The wife, who later slashed her wrists and was institutionalized, blames herself and her husband for their son's accident (they were making love instead of watching him), while the husband feels the past is dead and it's time to move on. After the wife inherits her aunt's isolated estate, the shaky twosome drive out to the fog-enshrouded countryside to spend some time together, but she is unnerved from the moment they arrive--and is alone in hearing a child's giggle coming from the next room. Quite obviously adapted from a play, this talk-heavy piece hits an early wall in the first act with the husband (David Hemmings) making numerous attempts to warm up his spouse (Gayle Hunnicutt), while she alternately invites his advances and pushes him away. The material might have been more tolerable if the set wasn't such a gloomy eyesore--and if Hunnicutt's character wasn't so impossibly mercurial. For those who stick with it, there's a plot twist in Act Three that is successfully pulled off, although it renders much of the rest of the picture pointless. George Kirgo and Robert Enders (also the producer) adapted Richard Lortz's play, which ran on Broadway for a scant eight performances. ** from ****
This movie is quite difficult to locate, which is a shame for horror fans. In the past couple of years, more sophisticated films such as "What Lies Beneath" and "The Sixth Sense" have been giving scary movies a good name. "Voices" is from this class of thriller because it achieves its shocks through the use of story and character interaction, with an ending that leaves you wondering and frightened for days. It is a simple story about a young British couple who want to get away for a short, romantic vacation in a secluded area of rural England. The destination is unfamiliar to both, and the journey there is ripe with dialogue so realistic and ordinary (plain conversation, arguments, reconciliations) that one might initially think "Voices" is an arty, ad-libbed drama as opposed to a horror flick. This mundane aspect is all a ploy to throw the viewer off, however. Once the young lovers find the vacation house, the mood shifts eerily and the sense of something threatening and supernatural surrounds the couple. They become frustrated, confused and hateful towards each other as their romantic weekend slips through their fingers amidst a haunting neither one can identify. The audience are left equally bewildered, because there is no standard, knife-wielding lunatic creeping outside,and there is no demon locked in the cellar. There is merely this sense of accelerating decline in the characters that is fascinating to observe, and we find ourselves needing to know what happened en route that has resulted in this bizarre situation. Ultimately, the final ten minutes of the film answers all of our questions and makes the subtleties we were puzzling over seem more profound...and the couple themselves discover it as we do, with just as much sense of terror.
Submitted by Penny Dreadful, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Submitted by Penny Dreadful, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
A protracted stage play on what looks like low grade videotape bookended by film sequences to remind you what the rest of it should have looked like. Unnaturalistic dialogue that goes absolutely where you expect, delivered with a generous helping of ham. My interest was piqued momentarily when I realised that the child playing John was in the tiger segment of Tales That Witness Madness, and there is a soupçon of guilty curiosity in watching Hemmings and Hunnicutt perform as a bickering couple in the knowledge that their real life marriage was at that time falling apart. Otherwise this is a colossal waste of everyone's time. Move along...
"Voices" is an exceptionally good and intelligently written ghost story. However, before watching it, I have a warning. The couple in the film (David Hemmings and Gayle Hunnicutt) are very depressed after the death of their son. As a result, she's depressed and angry...and he's just incredibly angry. They obviously are a couple who are in deep pain and while I didn't find the ghost part of the tale scary (it was more interesting than scary), it was tough seeing the pair tearing each other apart during the course of the film.
The movie begins with a couple taking their young son on an outing. They are distracted and the boy drowns. Some time has passed and the couple have decided to go to her summer home for a vacation. However, her emotional instability and his being tired of her emotional upheavals set the stage for a gloomy time. However, when they aren't bickering, she begins to hear children's voices...presumably the voices of dead children. Later, she even sees them. And, eventually, he hears them as well. What is going on here?!
This is a very intelligently written film. Despite the awful relationship between the couple, and it's hard to watch at times, the ending really pulls everything together perfectly. A wonderful and atmospheric movie.
The movie begins with a couple taking their young son on an outing. They are distracted and the boy drowns. Some time has passed and the couple have decided to go to her summer home for a vacation. However, her emotional instability and his being tired of her emotional upheavals set the stage for a gloomy time. However, when they aren't bickering, she begins to hear children's voices...presumably the voices of dead children. Later, she even sees them. And, eventually, he hears them as well. What is going on here?!
This is a very intelligently written film. Despite the awful relationship between the couple, and it's hard to watch at times, the ending really pulls everything together perfectly. A wonderful and atmospheric movie.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe marriage of Gayle Hunnicutt and David Hemmings was falling apart rapidly when they made this film together, and the tensions between the characters they played were echoed by the tensions between them on set. Kevin Billington, the director, said that it was his most uncomfortable experience directing a film, adding that the situation was of no benefit whatever to the mood of the film.
- ConnexionsRemade as Hum Kaun Hai? (2004)
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- How long is Voices?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée
- 1h 31min(91 min)
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.66 : 1
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