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4,8/10
2,7 mil
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Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA feature-length anthology film. They are known as myths, lore, and folktales. Created to give logic to mankind's darkest fears, these stories laid the foundation for what we now know as the... Ler tudoA feature-length anthology film. They are known as myths, lore, and folktales. Created to give logic to mankind's darkest fears, these stories laid the foundation for what we now know as the horror genre.A feature-length anthology film. They are known as myths, lore, and folktales. Created to give logic to mankind's darkest fears, these stories laid the foundation for what we now know as the horror genre.
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Avaliações em destaque
Overall I think this was a great idea but was not executed to its full potential. Each story in this folk horror anthology had positives and negatives, but I don't think not one of them had the whole package, which I would expect from at least a few of them (if any I would say 5 and 8)
1. Beautiful with seemingly good acting. Monster looked silly and story over all unfulfilling and confusing
2. Not bad, decent story and a bit spookier but the girls whimpering became irksome.
3. Loved the look of this one and the story was intriguing but once again the ending was confusing and unfulfilling.
4. This is the first one that was just bad. I was beginning to become tired of the lack of dialogue, but once I got to this one I ate my words. The dialogue was awful, story was silly and the performances were stilted.
5. This one was probably the best. Makeup and special effects were super cool and the story was spooky and intriguing.
6. The acting and execution on this one were not really up to par but it was one of the more interesting stories.
7. This one looked beautiful and was weird and spooky but the ending left me at meh.
8. Quite liked the style of this one. Added nice variety and felt quite original with a Tim Burton flare.
I feel like for most this would probably land at a 4 but because I love the concept, am partial to folk horror, appreciated the positives and also have a love for and am forgiving with indi cinema I feel a 5 is appropriate. This is certainly not going to be for everyone. Many people will watch this and slowly become more and more annoyed with the underdeveloped stories. However if you take into account budget, time/length, and the giant scale this project took on across the world... it's pretty cool. I would recommend, but to someone who loves folk tales and has patience lol.
1. Beautiful with seemingly good acting. Monster looked silly and story over all unfulfilling and confusing
2. Not bad, decent story and a bit spookier but the girls whimpering became irksome.
3. Loved the look of this one and the story was intriguing but once again the ending was confusing and unfulfilling.
4. This is the first one that was just bad. I was beginning to become tired of the lack of dialogue, but once I got to this one I ate my words. The dialogue was awful, story was silly and the performances were stilted.
5. This one was probably the best. Makeup and special effects were super cool and the story was spooky and intriguing.
6. The acting and execution on this one were not really up to par but it was one of the more interesting stories.
7. This one looked beautiful and was weird and spooky but the ending left me at meh.
8. Quite liked the style of this one. Added nice variety and felt quite original with a Tim Burton flare.
I feel like for most this would probably land at a 4 but because I love the concept, am partial to folk horror, appreciated the positives and also have a love for and am forgiving with indi cinema I feel a 5 is appropriate. This is certainly not going to be for everyone. Many people will watch this and slowly become more and more annoyed with the underdeveloped stories. However if you take into account budget, time/length, and the giant scale this project took on across the world... it's pretty cool. I would recommend, but to someone who loves folk tales and has patience lol.
Good movie south by southwest, interesting concenpt bringing shorts together. Worked really well
Well, for an anthology, then the 2018 "The Field Guide to Evil" wasn't a particular masterpiece. Not even while brandishing eight different stories based on real myths and folklore.
What went wrong here? Well, for starters the fact that most of the stories weren't really all that compelling or interesting. Might be a bit harsh to say, but it is the truth. While the visuals in the various segments definitely are interesting and mostly good, the contents of the stories just mostly fail to capture my interest and it felt mediocre at best. And with such an output, it became somewhat of an ordeal to sit through eight different stories.
Now, don't get me wrong, some of the stories actually are fairly good, but in overall, the anthology just failed to be all that interesting.
I do like the fact that they went around the world to put different folklore and myths from different countries into the anthology, because it definitely added variety.
The acting in the different segments was definitely good enough, just a shame that the actors and actresses didn't have an enticing script to work with in most of the stories, because it made the anthology drag behind and suffer.
If you do make it through this feature length anthology, and I do sincerely applaud you if you can endure that, chances are slim to none that you will ever return to watch "The Field Guide to Evil" a second time.
It felt like you never really got to submerge deep enough into the various tales to fully understand or get into the myth and folklore. The storytelling and narratives just felt way too superficial, given the limitations of time to tell each story.
This anthology definitely had potential, but it just ultimately failed where it mattered the most. As such, my rating for "The Field Guid to Evil" becomes a mere less than mediocre four out of ten stars.
What went wrong here? Well, for starters the fact that most of the stories weren't really all that compelling or interesting. Might be a bit harsh to say, but it is the truth. While the visuals in the various segments definitely are interesting and mostly good, the contents of the stories just mostly fail to capture my interest and it felt mediocre at best. And with such an output, it became somewhat of an ordeal to sit through eight different stories.
Now, don't get me wrong, some of the stories actually are fairly good, but in overall, the anthology just failed to be all that interesting.
I do like the fact that they went around the world to put different folklore and myths from different countries into the anthology, because it definitely added variety.
The acting in the different segments was definitely good enough, just a shame that the actors and actresses didn't have an enticing script to work with in most of the stories, because it made the anthology drag behind and suffer.
If you do make it through this feature length anthology, and I do sincerely applaud you if you can endure that, chances are slim to none that you will ever return to watch "The Field Guide to Evil" a second time.
It felt like you never really got to submerge deep enough into the various tales to fully understand or get into the myth and folklore. The storytelling and narratives just felt way too superficial, given the limitations of time to tell each story.
This anthology definitely had potential, but it just ultimately failed where it mattered the most. As such, my rating for "The Field Guid to Evil" becomes a mere less than mediocre four out of ten stars.
This movie had an excellent concept and an exceptional introduction sequence.
But the stories... just didn't quite make sense.
Only three out of eight made complete sense - the American story, the Indian story and the Greek story.
The American story was laughable, the Indian story was vaguely creepy (probably the best one) and the Greek one was barely horror....
...much like the other stories, which came complete with bad effects, atrocious acting and incoherent storylines.
The concept was brilliant and I was so excited to see the movie... it's just a shame that I got all hyped up in the intro only to be let down by being downright confused throughout.
I have three stars. Two for the good stories (Greece and India) and one for the good concept.
If I were you, I wouldn't waste your time.
But the stories... just didn't quite make sense.
Only three out of eight made complete sense - the American story, the Indian story and the Greek story.
The American story was laughable, the Indian story was vaguely creepy (probably the best one) and the Greek one was barely horror....
...much like the other stories, which came complete with bad effects, atrocious acting and incoherent storylines.
The concept was brilliant and I was so excited to see the movie... it's just a shame that I got all hyped up in the intro only to be let down by being downright confused throughout.
I have three stars. Two for the good stories (Greece and India) and one for the good concept.
If I were you, I wouldn't waste your time.
I'm no expert when it comes to myths and folklore, but the subject matter does interest me. I had never heard of any of these stories. That doesn't mean they aren't, but in eight tries I figured at least one would ring home.
Now whether or not these are familiar tales doesn't have any bearing on the quality of the movie representing them. However, all of the elements in movie making certainly have something to say about the movie's quality.
Some of these shorts were very lean on dialogue. That's not always a deal breaker though. There are a lot of great movies out there that use very little dialogue. The difference is that the good ones still manage to tell a clear story and captivate their audience. The silent shorts in this anthology were just confusing and distant. One segment traded dialogue for a baby crying sound effect on a loop. Hey movie maker, we get it. The baby is crying. Make the point and get off it. A constant baby crying is as distracting as when they have a phone ringing or a car horn going off for way too long. It just becomes an annoying noise.
I didn't realize how bad the acting was in this until the American segment played out. Wow, was that bad. That one played like a student film. The parents were just the worst. No chemistry with each other or their son. The boy was everything wrong with child actors all wrapped up in one.
And lets not leave out the gore. Why do inexperienced filmmakers and viewers, for that matter, think that gore and horror go hand in hand? Why? Being frightened, startled, psychologically tormented, or just creeped out are all valid aspects of horror. I don't know where or why gore seems to think it has a place here. If its done right and done with purpose, it can be very effective (Bone Tomahawk comes to mind). This entire anthology never once used gore to an advantage, but it used it in every segment. Just trying to gross someone out isn't horror.
Now whether or not these are familiar tales doesn't have any bearing on the quality of the movie representing them. However, all of the elements in movie making certainly have something to say about the movie's quality.
Some of these shorts were very lean on dialogue. That's not always a deal breaker though. There are a lot of great movies out there that use very little dialogue. The difference is that the good ones still manage to tell a clear story and captivate their audience. The silent shorts in this anthology were just confusing and distant. One segment traded dialogue for a baby crying sound effect on a loop. Hey movie maker, we get it. The baby is crying. Make the point and get off it. A constant baby crying is as distracting as when they have a phone ringing or a car horn going off for way too long. It just becomes an annoying noise.
I didn't realize how bad the acting was in this until the American segment played out. Wow, was that bad. That one played like a student film. The parents were just the worst. No chemistry with each other or their son. The boy was everything wrong with child actors all wrapped up in one.
And lets not leave out the gore. Why do inexperienced filmmakers and viewers, for that matter, think that gore and horror go hand in hand? Why? Being frightened, startled, psychologically tormented, or just creeped out are all valid aspects of horror. I don't know where or why gore seems to think it has a place here. If its done right and done with purpose, it can be very effective (Bone Tomahawk comes to mind). This entire anthology never once used gore to an advantage, but it used it in every segment. Just trying to gross someone out isn't horror.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe first movie to use equity crowdfunding (Reg CF, Title 3 of the JOBS Act) where a revenue share was offered to investors.
- Erros de gravaçãoIn the eighth story, "The Cobbler's Lot", a seam is visible on the leg of one of the nymphs when they are cavorting underwater with Tivadar, showing they are wearing nude bodysuits rather than actually being nude.
- ConexõesFeatured in Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror (2021)
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- How long is The Field Guide to Evil?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Field Guide to Evil
- Locações de filme
- Istanbul, Turquia(segment "Al Karisi")
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 7.860
- Tempo de duração1 hora 57 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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