Una famiglia che vive in una casa nell'Indiana scopre strani avvenimenti demoniaci che convincono loro e la comunità che la casa è un portale per l'inferno.Una famiglia che vive in una casa nell'Indiana scopre strani avvenimenti demoniaci che convincono loro e la comunità che la casa è un portale per l'inferno.Una famiglia che vive in una casa nell'Indiana scopre strani avvenimenti demoniaci che convincono loro e la comunità che la casa è un portale per l'inferno.
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 4 candidature totali
Recensioni in evidenza
The story has a promising start in the first 15 minutes, establishing characters and their struggles. After that you just wait for something dramatic to build up and set this film apart from other entries of the genre. It never happens. The film wastes the talented cast it had to narrate its story through.
I actually felt sorry for Glenn Close, doing such absurd films. She was the only good thing about thus film.
Avoid and save precious time.
Here's where Lee Daniel drove his film off the road and into the cornfields. The SFX scenes which occur more towards the end. Less is more. Our imaginations will conjure up far more frightening scenes than you could ever create with SFX. Sound effects are very effective and could've been utilized more instead of the graphic visuals. There aren't many of these scenes. My advice, close your eyes and listen to the sound effects. You're not missing anything vital.
The film was brilliantly casted. And the performances were on par, with what the actors were given. In my opinion, the characters could've been developed a bit more. There was enough of a connection for me to like them and fear for them, but I really wanted to know this family.
Overall, it's a unique horror film that's fairly well written with a very talented cast. I'm glad we're starting to see more smart, metaphorical horror, films, (but please, lose the bad SFX). This one's worth a watch. Enjoy.
Now let's get into the dialog. This movie said to Hereditary, "Hold my beer." The dialog at points is hilariously awful. I laughed multiple times so hard my gut hurt. Glenn Close was the cherry on top in the chaos. Chefs kiss.
Outside of story issues. Poors cgi. Some rough edits don't really improve the quality. The cinematography was well done with excitement color palette.
In all seriousness, Mo'Nique was the best part of the movie. Her scenes brought the movie back from it's satirical fridges to something with heart. I really hope to see her in more films. I think the horror genre fits Mo'Nique.
The Deliverance comes to us from director Lee Daniels and writers David Coggeshall and Elijah Bynum and takes inspiration from the 2011 Ammons haunting case which became a widely publicized alleged haunting that attracted an inordinate amount of media attention and became something of an Amityville Horror for the new generation. The case attracted attention from both skeptics and paranormalists including Zak Bagans who bought the house and made the 2018 documentary Demon House and much like the Lutz family's experiences in Amityville, many have written off the events as a psychological phenomenon rather than a supernatural one. Credibility aside, there was certainly room to make a compelling story from this material, after all: The Conjuring series has been reasonably well-regarded despite the questions about Ed and Loraine Warren's work. Unfortunately while The Deliverance has a good cast and proven director in place that seem interesting, the actual execution is very standard reworking of tropes we've seen time and time again that have long since worn out their welcome.
If there's anything to be said for the film, it's definitely that Daniels has assembled a strong and committed cast who bring their A game to the material. Andra Day who was nominated for an Academy Award for her role as Billie Holliday in her last colab with Daniels is still very good here as she really sells it playing someone who's barely holding it together and wants to do right by her children but is unwilling or unable to actually follow through on it. Day creates a compellingly flawed character and for all the faults of the film, her performance isn't one of them. The three children played by Anthony B. Jenkins, Caleb McLaughlin and Demi Singleton also do well in their respective roles (even if they are playing very standard archetypes for a movie like this) and you get that sense of pain and sadness that comes from this situation. Glenn Close is also good as Alberta who helps Ebony while also nursing wounds between the two of them that led them to this point and you can see the two working well off each other.
While dramatically speaking The Deliverance seems like it has a rich setup, the actual execution of what it's supposed to be, a horror movie, is turgid and just not scary. Watching The Deliverance, you get the sense that Daniels really wasn't all that interested in making a horror movie as it's nearly 40 minutes or so before the tension ramps up and during that opening act it really feels like it's playing as more of a domestic drama than a horror film. Once Daniels gets into the horror elements his inexperience as a genre filmmaker really shows as he does have scenes of "shocking" material but with the way it's shot there's no surprise factor and with one major flashback sequence it takes what's supposed to be a horrifying revelation and makes it seem almost funny with how it's staged. If you've seen films like The Exorcist or The Amityville Horror this follows many of those same tropes like self mutilation, white eyed fugue states, and bizarre behavior, and while Daniels tries to up the shock factor with scenes like Andre defecating in class and then throwing the feces you just become aware that this material isn't working. The movie seems aware of the inevitable comparisons that'll be made to The Exorcist to the point it even name drops that film in its third act, and this does not do the movie any favors because the climax takes so many elements from that film that it doesn't matter they try to justify it by calling it a "Deliverance" it's still essentially the same result.
The Deliverance sees Daniels trying to step outside his usual dramatic comfort zone in favor of something in the genre space but it just does not work. As a horror film it's reliant on tropes that no longer have any surprise factor to them, and Daniels frames scenes that should be shocking with the punch and impact of a feather. I will say that at least unlike The Exorcist: Believer, I was never mad at The Deliverance but I also wasn't entertained either save for the acting of a "too good for this" cast.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThis film is based on the Latoya Ammons family possession.
- BlooperWhen the demon Tre is manifesting through Dre in the form of a demonic version of Alberta, you can clearly see the portions of Glenn Close's teeth that have been painted black to make it look like she has a mouth full of pointed fangs.
- Citazioni
Doctor: Let's not push the panic button yet, Miss Henry. I'm sure there's a logical explanation for all of this.
Cynthia Henry: I just saw a little boy break his restraints, crawl out of that bed, crawl backwards on the floor, and climb up the fucking wall! What button should I push, Doctor?
["Based on Actual Events"]
- ConnessioniFeatures La valle delle bambole (1967)
- Colonne sonoreI Know Who Holds Tomorrow
Written by Ira F. Stanphill
Performed by Andra Day
Produced by Warryn Campbell
Andra Day appears courtesy of Warner Records Inc.
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- La liberación
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 52 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39:1