Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe film consists of video recordings of an experiment in which the test subject was not allowed to fall asleep for 14 days.The film consists of video recordings of an experiment in which the test subject was not allowed to fall asleep for 14 days.The film consists of video recordings of an experiment in which the test subject was not allowed to fall asleep for 14 days.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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- AnecdotesActor Mikhail Nekrasov died a few month after premiere of the movie.
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Short film, adapting the infamous Creepypasta legend of the same name. Shot in stark black-and-white and styled as recovered VHS footage, the film immerses viewers in the harrowing tale of a Soviet-era sleep deprivation experiment gone wrong. Eschewing dialogue and relying on text inserts and ambient sound, Sergey A. Crafts a lo-fi nightmare that amplifies the original story's visceral horror while critiquing the ethics of human experimentation .
The film mimics degraded VHS recordings, complete with tracking errors, grain, and flickering distortions. This choice heightens the illusion of authenticity, as if the footage were clandestinely salvaged from a Cold War-era archive .
With no spoken dialogue, the film communicates through stark intertitles and a disembodied narrator's monotone voice. This absence of human speech mirrors the subjects' psychological unraveling, emphasizing their isolation. The claustrophobic lab setting-dimly lit chambers, rusted equipment, and shadowy figures-evokes Soviet-era scientific brutality. Subjects are depicted as faceless silhouettes, their humanity stripped away by the experiment's dehumanizing conditions.
The film faithfully adapts the 2010 Creepypasta tale, which details a fictional 1940s Soviet experiment where five prisoners were subjected to sleep-depriving gas for 15 days, leading to psychosis, self-mutilation, and cannibalism . Sergey A. Condenses this narrative into a series of fragmented, text-driven vignettes with one prisoner, preserving the story's gruesome climax while omitting explicit gore. By framing the experiment as a state-sanctioned atrocity, the film critiques historical Soviet secrecy and the devaluation of human life. The sterile, bureaucratic tone of the narration contrasts grotesquely with the subjects' deterioration, underscoring the banality of evil .
The VHS aesthetic and text-based storytelling are effective in evoking unease. A standout sequence shows time-lapsed footage of a subject's face contorting in agony, distorted by tape degradation-a masterclass in implied horror. The film's brevity (7 minutes) limits character development, reducing subjects to anonymous vessels of suffering. Additionally, the lack of a clear resolution may frustrate viewers unfamiliar with the Creepypasta lore .
"Russian Sleep Experiment" is a testament to the power of restraint in horror. Sergey A.'s decision to strip the story to its bare bones-relying on atmosphere, sound, and suggestion-transforms a well-trodden internet myth into a haunting sensory experience. While its niche appeal and experimental style may alienate some, the film remains a compelling artifact of digital-age folklore, proving that sometimes, the most terrifying stories are those left half-told.
"A silent scream etched into celluloid-proof that true horror thrives in the gaps between what is shown and what is imagined."
The film mimics degraded VHS recordings, complete with tracking errors, grain, and flickering distortions. This choice heightens the illusion of authenticity, as if the footage were clandestinely salvaged from a Cold War-era archive .
With no spoken dialogue, the film communicates through stark intertitles and a disembodied narrator's monotone voice. This absence of human speech mirrors the subjects' psychological unraveling, emphasizing their isolation. The claustrophobic lab setting-dimly lit chambers, rusted equipment, and shadowy figures-evokes Soviet-era scientific brutality. Subjects are depicted as faceless silhouettes, their humanity stripped away by the experiment's dehumanizing conditions.
The film faithfully adapts the 2010 Creepypasta tale, which details a fictional 1940s Soviet experiment where five prisoners were subjected to sleep-depriving gas for 15 days, leading to psychosis, self-mutilation, and cannibalism . Sergey A. Condenses this narrative into a series of fragmented, text-driven vignettes with one prisoner, preserving the story's gruesome climax while omitting explicit gore. By framing the experiment as a state-sanctioned atrocity, the film critiques historical Soviet secrecy and the devaluation of human life. The sterile, bureaucratic tone of the narration contrasts grotesquely with the subjects' deterioration, underscoring the banality of evil .
The VHS aesthetic and text-based storytelling are effective in evoking unease. A standout sequence shows time-lapsed footage of a subject's face contorting in agony, distorted by tape degradation-a masterclass in implied horror. The film's brevity (7 minutes) limits character development, reducing subjects to anonymous vessels of suffering. Additionally, the lack of a clear resolution may frustrate viewers unfamiliar with the Creepypasta lore .
"Russian Sleep Experiment" is a testament to the power of restraint in horror. Sergey A.'s decision to strip the story to its bare bones-relying on atmosphere, sound, and suggestion-transforms a well-trodden internet myth into a haunting sensory experience. While its niche appeal and experimental style may alienate some, the film remains a compelling artifact of digital-age folklore, proving that sometimes, the most terrifying stories are those left half-told.
"A silent scream etched into celluloid-proof that true horror thrives in the gaps between what is shown and what is imagined."
- SmokiFursuit
- 13 févr. 2025
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Русский эксперимент со сном. Фильм
- Lieux de tournage
- Moscou, Russie(room)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 50 RUR (estimé)
- Durée7 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 16:9 HD
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