Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA small-town woman, fresh to the city, buys a second-hand Jaguar haunted by the ghost of a murdered woman and her killer.A small-town woman, fresh to the city, buys a second-hand Jaguar haunted by the ghost of a murdered woman and her killer.A small-town woman, fresh to the city, buys a second-hand Jaguar haunted by the ghost of a murdered woman and her killer.
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- 2 vitórias e 1 indicação no total
Lewis Martin
- Jag Enthusiast
- (as Lew Martin)
Avaliações em destaque
Of course any movie buff will think about THE CAR or CHRISTINE, an evil, ghost car, but also psychopath story and he will be damn right. A TV movie from New Zeland and that seems to be inspired by a TV show anthology episode such as THRILLER, ONE STEP BEYOND or TWILIGHT ZONE. It is pleasant to watch and no boring at all. Intriguing film, I guess the non American film industries provide many of those underrated features, and we have to be lucky to find them. Yes, it is tense, with no length to interfere with the pace. It is unusual to melt two genres, psychopath killer and ghost scheme. Yes, unusual.
I wasn't expecting a lot from this after finding the tape at a thrift store for a dollar, and reading the ratings here before watching. However, I was pleasantly surprised at how well crafted this tale of a haunted Jaguar was, and it reminded me very much of the great 1970s British series of features broadcast by BBC under the title of Thriller. The US release title of Dark of the Night is a bit more appropriate than Mr Wrong.
Though filmed in New Zealand in around 1984, it has the look and feel of something done 10 years earlier, and is not at all like a 1980s horror film. It also has nice character development and a well-handled plot with a subtle musical score. Some might feel it is a bit slow, but that is more an effect of a comparison to modern terror films that are quick-cut and horror-action vehicles with teens being slaughtered, and with relatively little in the way of development of character.
This film does not stereotype it's players, and give full dimension to as many characters as possible. The one fault it has is a lack of substance in regards to the one who we learn is the killer. But even with this shortcoming, I'd still give high recommendations.
Though filmed in New Zealand in around 1984, it has the look and feel of something done 10 years earlier, and is not at all like a 1980s horror film. It also has nice character development and a well-handled plot with a subtle musical score. Some might feel it is a bit slow, but that is more an effect of a comparison to modern terror films that are quick-cut and horror-action vehicles with teens being slaughtered, and with relatively little in the way of development of character.
This film does not stereotype it's players, and give full dimension to as many characters as possible. The one fault it has is a lack of substance in regards to the one who we learn is the killer. But even with this shortcoming, I'd still give high recommendations.
This consistently chilling, finely tuned supernatural thriller from New Zealand has far more poke under the bonnet than you might initially expect! After moving to the big smoke, sensitive country gal, Meg (Heather Bolton) purchases a haunted Jag which rather swiftly takes her on a white-knuckled, nightmarishly circuitous journey into radiator-bursting Hitchcockian fright! The magnificently menacing performance by David Letch as 'The Man', an engagingly spooky text, appealing NZ locations and consistently sharp filmmaking from, Gaylene Preston eerily ensures that no viewer's spine shall go untingled! An unjustly obscure thriller, this atmospheric Kiwi road-creeper comes especially recommended to spook-seeking aficionados of vintage vehicular maleficence!
'Enjoy the ecstasy of abject terror in, Gaylene Preston's gripping 'Dark of The Night', this masterfully creepy supernatural horror, will certainly put your cinematic shock absorbers through their paces! Cult horror fans will most certainly recognise, David Letch from Aussie Sci-horror gem 'Death Warmed up'
'Enjoy the ecstasy of abject terror in, Gaylene Preston's gripping 'Dark of The Night', this masterfully creepy supernatural horror, will certainly put your cinematic shock absorbers through their paces! Cult horror fans will most certainly recognise, David Letch from Aussie Sci-horror gem 'Death Warmed up'
New Zealander Heather Bolton buys a jaguar from a car lot, takes a long drive home to see the folks, and on her return trip sees a strange woman(who she had already seen in a dream) get in her back seat...then a man gets in the passenger seat. She stops car for gas, man gets out, and she drives back home. She works, gets some roses, realizes car belonged to a woman that disappeared mysteriously, and then for an interminable amount of time - tries to sell her car. But what happens...the door won't open when buyers try to look at it. And that, except for the rather tame and lame denouement, is the height of suspense for this literal "sleeper" from New Zealand. Rather than saying I laughed, I cried, and I ran the whole gambit of emotions, I can say with honest frankness, I stretched, I sighed, and I yawned...repeatedly! Who would have thought life with a jaguar could be this boring and dull. A real snooze-fest!
Young frump Meg (a likeable turn by Heather Bolton) buys a second hand Jaguar only to learn that the car is haunted by the ghost of Mary Carmichael (Perry Piercy), a murdered woman whose body was never found. Worse still, Mary's killer begins to stalk Meg with the intention of making her his next victim.
Dark of the Night (AKA Mr. Wrong) is a gentle ghost story/thriller from New Zealand - a little too gentle for most of the time, with very little in the way of genuinely scary stuff. For much of the film, the supernatural happenings take a back set (pun intended) to Meg and her relationships (with friends, parents and romantic interest Wayne, played by Danny Mulheron), none of which is particularly interesting.
Only in the final five minutes, in which the killer (David Letch) finally makes his move, does the film achieve any level of tension or suspense, but it's too little, too late.
Dark of the Night (AKA Mr. Wrong) is a gentle ghost story/thriller from New Zealand - a little too gentle for most of the time, with very little in the way of genuinely scary stuff. For much of the film, the supernatural happenings take a back set (pun intended) to Meg and her relationships (with friends, parents and romantic interest Wayne, played by Danny Mulheron), none of which is particularly interesting.
Only in the final five minutes, in which the killer (David Letch) finally makes his move, does the film achieve any level of tension or suspense, but it's too little, too late.
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- ConexõesReferences Christine, o Carro Assassino (1983)
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