IMDb रेटिंग
6.4/10
1.9 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA young woman is invited by her girlfriend, who lives in an English country mansion, to stay there with her. The estate, however, isn't quite what it seems--and neither is the friend who iss... सभी पढ़ेंA young woman is invited by her girlfriend, who lives in an English country mansion, to stay there with her. The estate, however, isn't quite what it seems--and neither is the friend who issued the invitation.A young woman is invited by her girlfriend, who lives in an English country mansion, to stay there with her. The estate, however, isn't quite what it seems--and neither is the friend who issued the invitation.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
- पुरस्कार
- कुल 1 नामांकन
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
An odd woman takes her girlfriend to stay at her place in the country, but a former girlfriend has something to say about that ...
Slow and creepy mystery. The atmosphere is set perfectly by photography and music, but especially through the overgrown lakeside estate from the early '70s, when locations were cheap. I'm not sure this is a horror - it does dabble in the ghostly, but really it's all about psychosis - although the gore is effective: films from this era relished their stabbing scenes, and the crunchy-cabbage sound effects in this one got me every time.
The lead actress is excellent, and the performances all round are good, but the big drawback is in the character of the odd-job man: the performance is a little awkward, and the purpose of the character turns out mundane, missing the opportunity to make this a true horror, where things turn inside out and the past becomes cosmic truth. Ahem. In the end it's just a tale of bloody madness temporarily disturbing the surface of normality.
Music sets the tone. Photography is mostly delicious, and the house and lake take on real character.
Overall: Nicely disturbing, but falls short.
Slow and creepy mystery. The atmosphere is set perfectly by photography and music, but especially through the overgrown lakeside estate from the early '70s, when locations were cheap. I'm not sure this is a horror - it does dabble in the ghostly, but really it's all about psychosis - although the gore is effective: films from this era relished their stabbing scenes, and the crunchy-cabbage sound effects in this one got me every time.
The lead actress is excellent, and the performances all round are good, but the big drawback is in the character of the odd-job man: the performance is a little awkward, and the purpose of the character turns out mundane, missing the opportunity to make this a true horror, where things turn inside out and the past becomes cosmic truth. Ahem. In the end it's just a tale of bloody madness temporarily disturbing the surface of normality.
Music sets the tone. Photography is mostly delicious, and the house and lake take on real character.
Overall: Nicely disturbing, but falls short.
Called out to an ancestral house, a troubled woman is invited by her friend to spend time together and strengthen their relationship, but the more they spend together the more the house has an effect on her psyche and mental sanity bringing a deadly resolution for all around her.
Overall, this was a decent enough if somewhat troubled psychological genre effort. One of the better features here is the main descent into psychological instability that becomes the focal point of the film. Since the signs of her unhinged state are given to us from the very beginning through the journal writing and just reserved remarks that present themselves whenever she's on-screen, the seeds are sewn so that the unnerving nature of the house, as well as the surrounding woods on it's grounds, offer the kind of appropriate setup for where this one goes. As the reserved and blank expressions, cryptic sayings about nothing in particular, or just plain odd behavior finally come to a head, the atmosphere built up here features quite the fun turn of events at play here which makes for a fun enough time. However, there are some big issues with this one. The main drawback on display here is that for all the good this does in establishing the psychological breakdown of its main character and what's going on with her, nothing else really happens here. This one becomes incredibly repetitious in the use of a formulaic storyline involving her snapping at something her friend does, blaming it on her psychosis but doing nothing to help remedy the situation, and then trying to rebuild their friendship until the next incident. This produces a dull and generally dreary pacing which is hardly all that memorable or exciting in the slightest, and without explaining anything until a brief conversation at the end to reveal what the twist actually meant means this one is based solely on the atmosphere generated.
Rated Unrated/R: Violence and Language.
Overall, this was a decent enough if somewhat troubled psychological genre effort. One of the better features here is the main descent into psychological instability that becomes the focal point of the film. Since the signs of her unhinged state are given to us from the very beginning through the journal writing and just reserved remarks that present themselves whenever she's on-screen, the seeds are sewn so that the unnerving nature of the house, as well as the surrounding woods on it's grounds, offer the kind of appropriate setup for where this one goes. As the reserved and blank expressions, cryptic sayings about nothing in particular, or just plain odd behavior finally come to a head, the atmosphere built up here features quite the fun turn of events at play here which makes for a fun enough time. However, there are some big issues with this one. The main drawback on display here is that for all the good this does in establishing the psychological breakdown of its main character and what's going on with her, nothing else really happens here. This one becomes incredibly repetitious in the use of a formulaic storyline involving her snapping at something her friend does, blaming it on her psychosis but doing nothing to help remedy the situation, and then trying to rebuild their friendship until the next incident. This produces a dull and generally dreary pacing which is hardly all that memorable or exciting in the slightest, and without explaining anything until a brief conversation at the end to reveal what the twist actually meant means this one is based solely on the atmosphere generated.
Rated Unrated/R: Violence and Language.
'Symptoms' is an awkward and obtusely constructed film on emotional isolation and sexual disharmony between people which uses forms of psychological horror to build an uneasy tonality from many small narrative deviations and pockets of suggestive information.
Needless to say mad, insane, rabid and dissolute homicidal violence eventually manifests, and it manifests upon plenty of assembled characters.
'Symptoms' is certainly a film to enjoy and savour the taste of and not one to eat in and feel hearty, heavy nourishment.
Form and style take precedence over function and substance; however in its mood and tonality, so carefully achieved there is a great value.
In the dirty and dingy world of mouldy and autumnal decay and decline, in the offset and isolated characters and in the always heavily suggested mental illness and sexual dissonance of the lead character played by Angela Pleasance this film builds an insane and unsanitary tonal mood piece.
I rate a high 6/10 and I'd recommend this film to fans of morbidity and psychological slashers in their films. Also to fans of 70's British horror in general.
Needless to say mad, insane, rabid and dissolute homicidal violence eventually manifests, and it manifests upon plenty of assembled characters.
'Symptoms' is certainly a film to enjoy and savour the taste of and not one to eat in and feel hearty, heavy nourishment.
Form and style take precedence over function and substance; however in its mood and tonality, so carefully achieved there is a great value.
In the dirty and dingy world of mouldy and autumnal decay and decline, in the offset and isolated characters and in the always heavily suggested mental illness and sexual dissonance of the lead character played by Angela Pleasance this film builds an insane and unsanitary tonal mood piece.
I rate a high 6/10 and I'd recommend this film to fans of morbidity and psychological slashers in their films. Also to fans of 70's British horror in general.
"Symptoms" follows a paper-thin plot line that details a woman who invites a girlfriend to her remote mansion for the weekend, but her true motives come into focus as something far more sinister than imagined. Originally screened at the Cannes Film Festival, "Symptoms" inexplicably became a lost a film in the ensuing years, until being unearthed and re-released on Blu-ray for the twenty-first century.
To put it plainly, if you're looking for a film where things "happen," then look elsewhere. This is a film that never quite entirely gets onto its feet, and instead wallows in its own mysteriousness and atmosphere—and the atmosphere is laid on thick. The camera meditates on the foggy England backwoods, the swampy lake that holds dark secrets, and the dilapidated mansion that is quite literally engulfed in trees and foliage. If nothing else, "Symptoms" is a mood piece, and a fantastic one at that.
Given its sparse scripting, the film demands top-notch acting from its performers, and the audience gets as much with Angela Pleasence in the lead role of the mysterious, violent hostess. She is vulnerable and simultaneously terrifying, and has a compelling screen presence. Lorna Heilbron matches Pleasence as the seductive and insouciant house guest.
Writer-director José Ramón Larraz, who is perhaps best known for his over-the-top lesbian vampire flick "Vampyres," has a consistent style established with this film, and his vision comes across on screen very strongly. Given his notoriety for the aforementioned film, the natural expectation I had for this was along the lines of an exploitation film, but it is far, far from it—it's actually a classy, quiet, and ominous meditation on broken femininity, at times evoking Robert Altman's "Images" or 1971's "Let's Scare Jessica to Death." It is part horror film and part psychological character study, moving along in that order; after the first dramatic scene of violence, the film and its heroine unravel before the audience, and the result is nothing short of compelling.
Overall, "Symptoms" is a phenomenal and under-appreciated horror film. Its status as a lost film has no doubt robbed it of the wider contemporary audience it deserves, but hopefully the re-release of it will attract modern genre fans. I was blown away by the nuance and all-around skillfulness of it. It's a quietly spooky and wildly atmospheric film that is well-acted and well-shot. Truly something to behold for fans of understated cinema. 9/10.
To put it plainly, if you're looking for a film where things "happen," then look elsewhere. This is a film that never quite entirely gets onto its feet, and instead wallows in its own mysteriousness and atmosphere—and the atmosphere is laid on thick. The camera meditates on the foggy England backwoods, the swampy lake that holds dark secrets, and the dilapidated mansion that is quite literally engulfed in trees and foliage. If nothing else, "Symptoms" is a mood piece, and a fantastic one at that.
Given its sparse scripting, the film demands top-notch acting from its performers, and the audience gets as much with Angela Pleasence in the lead role of the mysterious, violent hostess. She is vulnerable and simultaneously terrifying, and has a compelling screen presence. Lorna Heilbron matches Pleasence as the seductive and insouciant house guest.
Writer-director José Ramón Larraz, who is perhaps best known for his over-the-top lesbian vampire flick "Vampyres," has a consistent style established with this film, and his vision comes across on screen very strongly. Given his notoriety for the aforementioned film, the natural expectation I had for this was along the lines of an exploitation film, but it is far, far from it—it's actually a classy, quiet, and ominous meditation on broken femininity, at times evoking Robert Altman's "Images" or 1971's "Let's Scare Jessica to Death." It is part horror film and part psychological character study, moving along in that order; after the first dramatic scene of violence, the film and its heroine unravel before the audience, and the result is nothing short of compelling.
Overall, "Symptoms" is a phenomenal and under-appreciated horror film. Its status as a lost film has no doubt robbed it of the wider contemporary audience it deserves, but hopefully the re-release of it will attract modern genre fans. I was blown away by the nuance and all-around skillfulness of it. It's a quietly spooky and wildly atmospheric film that is well-acted and well-shot. Truly something to behold for fans of understated cinema. 9/10.
A considerable nonchalance fills the first long stretch of the movie, with nothing more than mere suggestions of anything peculiar dancing around the edges of the picture. At that, the marginal unease is built almost exclusively with out of place sound effects, John Scott's ominous score, or lines of dialogue that do not comport with the beautiful scenery and setting. So it is until just over one-third of the film has passed, as the eeriness begins to coalesce - first with more concrete notions of something amiss in the scenario, and at last with confirmation.
I appreciate the costume design. I think the concept is alright. However, I think the screenplay is regrettably thin, and hollow. Unconcerned pacing and piecemeal, light plot limit our engagement, and dialogue is often ham-handed and unconvincing. These qualities are echoed in the writing and orchestration of scenes, and the characterizations, to which little to no personality is imparted. All this works to restrict the cast, especially stars Angela Pleasence and Lorna Heilbron, from fully realizing the potential of characters. Heilbron is duly pleasant and uncertain as Anne, and Pleasence bears a dark intensity and disquiet as Helen; sadly, that's about all the more there is to be said. Whatever measure of nuance the leads are able to bring to their performances is effectively lost given the indelicate, feeble hand otherwise crafting the feature.
There are strong ideas here, and a strong cast. The end result just doesn't cut it. The atmosphere, thrills, foreboding, and broad entertainment we should get are greatly dampened by what feels like a weak, incomplete writing. I feel as indifferent to the film at its end as I did when I first began watching - save for that I'm also disappointed. There are worse things you could watch, and yet - a horror-thriller should get one's blood pumping to at least some small extent, but as it is, this simply doesn't. I hesitate to say that 'Symptoms' is outright bad, but it's not good, either.
I appreciate the costume design. I think the concept is alright. However, I think the screenplay is regrettably thin, and hollow. Unconcerned pacing and piecemeal, light plot limit our engagement, and dialogue is often ham-handed and unconvincing. These qualities are echoed in the writing and orchestration of scenes, and the characterizations, to which little to no personality is imparted. All this works to restrict the cast, especially stars Angela Pleasence and Lorna Heilbron, from fully realizing the potential of characters. Heilbron is duly pleasant and uncertain as Anne, and Pleasence bears a dark intensity and disquiet as Helen; sadly, that's about all the more there is to be said. Whatever measure of nuance the leads are able to bring to their performances is effectively lost given the indelicate, feeble hand otherwise crafting the feature.
There are strong ideas here, and a strong cast. The end result just doesn't cut it. The atmosphere, thrills, foreboding, and broad entertainment we should get are greatly dampened by what feels like a weak, incomplete writing. I feel as indifferent to the film at its end as I did when I first began watching - save for that I'm also disappointed. There are worse things you could watch, and yet - a horror-thriller should get one's blood pumping to at least some small extent, but as it is, this simply doesn't. I hesitate to say that 'Symptoms' is outright bad, but it's not good, either.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाDisappeared a few years after release and included in BFI's "most wanted" list of missing feature films in 2008. Negatives mysteriously showed up in 2014.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Symptoms: An Interview with Angela Pleasence (2016)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Symptoms?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Lânet
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- High Street, Pinner, Middlesex, इंग्लैंड, यूनाइटेड किंगडम(Helen visits the village chemist)
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
इस पेज में योगदान दें
किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें