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IMDbPro

Gritos Mortais

Título original: Dead Silence
  • 2007
  • 14
  • 1 h 29 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,1/10
106 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
3.571
285
Enn Reitel in Gritos Mortais (2007)
Assistir a Official Trailer
Reproduzir trailer2:14
7 vídeos
80 fotos
Terror sobrenaturalHorrorMistérioSuspense

Um jovem viúvo volta à sua cidade natal para buscar respostas ao assassinato de sua esposa, que pode estar relacionado ao fantasma de um ventríloquo morto.Um jovem viúvo volta à sua cidade natal para buscar respostas ao assassinato de sua esposa, que pode estar relacionado ao fantasma de um ventríloquo morto.Um jovem viúvo volta à sua cidade natal para buscar respostas ao assassinato de sua esposa, que pode estar relacionado ao fantasma de um ventríloquo morto.

  • Direção
    • James Wan
  • Roteiristas
    • Leigh Whannell
    • James Wan
  • Artistas
    • Ryan Kwanten
    • Amber Valletta
    • Donnie Wahlberg
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,1/10
    106 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    3.571
    285
    • Direção
      • James Wan
    • Roteiristas
      • Leigh Whannell
      • James Wan
    • Artistas
      • Ryan Kwanten
      • Amber Valletta
      • Donnie Wahlberg
    • 448Avaliações de usuários
    • 166Avaliações da crítica
    • 34Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos7

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:14
    Official Trailer
    Dead Silence Scene: Jaimie Talks To Detective Lipton
    Clip 0:31
    Dead Silence Scene: Jaimie Talks To Detective Lipton
    Dead Silence Scene: Jaimie Talks To Detective Lipton
    Clip 0:31
    Dead Silence Scene: Jaimie Talks To Detective Lipton
    Dead Silence Scene: Lisa Gets Attacked By Billy
    Clip 0:46
    Dead Silence Scene: Lisa Gets Attacked By Billy
    Dead Silence Scene: Jaimie And Lisa Talk About The Doll
    Clip 0:50
    Dead Silence Scene: Jaimie And Lisa Talk About The Doll
    Dead Silence Scene: Mary Shaw Is Heckled
    Clip 1:33
    Dead Silence Scene: Mary Shaw Is Heckled
    Dead Silence Scene: Billy Scares Jaimie In His Hotel Room
    Clip 0:49
    Dead Silence Scene: Billy Scares Jaimie In His Hotel Room

    Fotos80

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    + 72
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    Elenco principal18

    Editar
    Ryan Kwanten
    Ryan Kwanten
    • Jamie Ashen
    Amber Valletta
    Amber Valletta
    • Ella Ashen
    Donnie Wahlberg
    Donnie Wahlberg
    • Det. Lipton
    Michael Fairman
    Michael Fairman
    • Henry Walker
    Joan Heney
    • Marion Walker
    Bob Gunton
    Bob Gunton
    • Edward Ashen
    Laura Regan
    Laura Regan
    • Lisa Ashen
    Dmitry Chepovetsky
    Dmitry Chepovetsky
    • Richard Walker
    Judith Roberts
    Judith Roberts
    • Mary Shaw
    Keir Gilchrist
    Keir Gilchrist
    • Young Henry
    Steven Taylor
    • Michael Ashen
    David Talbot
    • Priest
    Steve Adams
    Steve Adams
    • 1941 Detective
    Shelley Peterson
    • Lisa's Mom
    Enn Reitel
    Enn Reitel
    • Billy
    • (narração)
    Fred Tatasciore
    Fred Tatasciore
    • Clown
    • (narração)
    Austin Majors
    Austin Majors
    • Michael Ashen
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    Julian Richings
    Julian Richings
    • Bos
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • James Wan
    • Roteiristas
      • Leigh Whannell
      • James Wan
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários448

    6,1106.4K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7spire65

    Better than many recent horror films

    Firstly, the story isn't bad at all, although it'll hardly win any awards. It's pretty difficult for horror movies to continually be original, and this certainly has some moments in it. The villain seems to have some originality; it's not some Chucky imitation. The story lacks depth, and the characters aren't fleshed out at all. The real point of this movie is to be a horror film and nothing more. After the first few (poor) scenes, this movie does one of two things: keep you waiting to jump or trying to make you jump. From the rest of the audience's reactions, I'd say it did a pretty good job at that.

    The acting was nothing to write home about, but for this genre, it's more good than bad.

    Overall, I would say this a horror movie that deserves a trip to the theater. Compared to many of the sad horror attempts that come out, this isn't too terrible. And it doesn't rely on an abundance of gore like many others do.
    8MessyStinkman

    Nightmare fuel with something creepy for everyone

    If you have nightmares easily, I suggest staying away from this film: it's pure nightmare fuel. If you have an active imagination, you could have trouble sleeping with the film's imagery burned into the back of your eyeballs.

    The story's intriguing enough. There just aren't enough horror films these days about menacing old ventriloquist ladies that are buried with their creepy dolls, who have come back from the dead to seek vengeance on the families that put her in the grave, by tearing out their tongues. The atmosphere is heavy, the creepy music is provided by SAW'S Charlie Clouser, the colors are washed out, and the sets are surreal.

    Many will dismiss it as a formulaic, clichéd horror film. The SAW creators, who are huge horror fans, have fun making their own version of the American horror film by throwing in plenty of classic tropes such as the wise-cracking detective (Donnie Wahlberg) and the crazy old lady that knows more than she should.

    I was pleased that the film didn't shy away from gore: it wasn't gratuitous, but it did enhance the horror. Most ghost stories tend to be separate from the gore flicks (I'm a fan of both), but I always enjoy seeing them combined. Another aspect that was interesting was the "silence" mode that signaled the presence of evil.

    It's got plenty of horror elements to provide scares: aged film, folk tales, singing children, antique furniture, voice recordings fading out, flickering lights, dead loved ones beckoning from beyond the grave, photographs of dead families, cackling old women, wide-eyed dolls, billowing curtains, plenty of thunder and lightning, open caskets, dank crawlspaces, and a pervading sense of evil throughout.

    Critics won't dig it, but I've shown it to two groups of friends and the majority were terrified and claimed it to be one of the scariest movies they'd seen. If you're a fan of atmospheric horror that aims to creep you to the bone, you should be more than pleased.
    5DarthPaul85

    Meh.

    What can I say...I liked Saw, I'm scared of Ventriloquist Dummiess, this movie was a sure hit, right? Well...

    My expectations were fairly high, I suppose. I was expecting a more intellectual, (or maybe just more interesting) plot. Let me cover the things this movie did well and what it lacked.

    On the good side, the movie had a nice style to it. There were some legitimately scary scenes (cinemagraphically). The music was also appropriate, and they definitely took some chances, which is nice to see.

    However, the entire movie is based on a fairly generic concept, and a very uninspired script. Don't get me wrong, the movie "works," but there is nothing to this movie beyond its base concept- no depth, no real characterization, and honestly, very few explanations at all. The end should tie everything together, but instead reveals how shallow the story really is.

    Bottom line, it's the kind of movie that could easily be lost in the sea of other generic horror movies out there. I almost feel the story may have worked better as a farce, because it just didn't try hard enough as a horror.
    6fernandoschiavi

    Despite the script's clichés and minor confusions, this is a great entertainment option for horror fans

    When, in 2004, James Wan and Leigh Whannell ran, with just over $1 million and in just under a month, Saw, perhaps they did not imagine that they were performing what would be one of the best and most well- successful thrillers of a whole decade. The commercial success allowed young people to produce, with a much larger budget, sequences that, more technically sophisticated (mainly the second and third parts, directed by Darren Lynn Bousman) were absolute blockbusters, projecting the Jigsaw character (played brilliantly by Tobin Bell) to the post of first great horror film villain of this millennium.

    The duo James and Leigh were filling their pockets with cash and becoming more and more powerful in Hollywood, gaining creative and financial freedom for what would be their next project: Dead Silence (as the sum of the budgets of the first three films in the Death Games franchise was approximately $17 and a half million, the resources available to the duo in their new venture exceeded $20 million). For all that, great expectations were created around the release of Dead Silence. The original script was developed by James Wan and Leigh Whannell themselves, and according to the authors' definition, it is closer to the classic horror, and would even be inspired by the productions of the legendary Hammer (English producer responsible for the first color adaptations of Dracula and Frankenstein). Therefore, the plot would develop much more atmosphere and explore violence less than Death Games.

    The story is sure to make many remember the endless saga of Child's Play, Chucky. To start the plot, an interesting and convenient explanation of the origin of the word "ventriloquist" and the legends about it is presented, which makes the story more intelligible. Introductions made, we are led to the scene in which Jamie (Ryan Kwanten) and Lisa Ashen (Laura Regan), happily married and living far from their birthplace, Raven's Fair, receive a strange ventriloquist puppet, which reminds them of ventriloquist Mary Shaw, who was murdered in the city for being suspected of kidnapping and killing children. As expected, after something strange happens, Jamie leaves, leaving his wife at home alone. And to his surprise (not ours, of course), he finds his wife dead in his bed, her tongue torn out. And, of course, Jamie is suspect number one. To try to prove his innocence, Jamie returns to his hometown, even though he is banned by court orders, willing to face the legend and put an end to the ghost of Mary Shaw.

    Dead Silence is perhaps the most significant film for understanding why James Wan's artistic vision has made him the most popular name in horror in the 21st century. The filmmaker, in addition to presenting an expert and skillful mastery of the camera, able to involve the viewer in his accelerated rhythmic and instigating mystery, while also valuing the atmospheric construction of the ambiance for the fright - which may or may not come and then he's one of the best at handling the jump scare feature - on top of that, he has a broad repertoire in the genre, used very well to his advantage to coordinate the haunting effect of his stories making them seem bigger than they really are. Wan and Whannell work with super established clichés in horror, especially in terms of plot. There is a pre-plot formula used in this regard, starting with as little information as possible at the base and supporting the plot hole on a growing mystery of figuring out what the main threat is. Through this, Wan manipulates the very lines of his text, essentially superfluous as it is a beaten string of elements of the genre that everyone knows and he has a lot of repertoire, but which are very well directed in stages in the film to base their main villain on an iconography visual that is the mainstay for the effect of distorting the supposed complexity of the story.

    The script, however, suffers from some structural problems and creates some unlikely situations, such as the "avenger" husband, who seems more interested in unraveling the mystery of the strange puppet, than suffering the violent death of his recently murdered wife or the policeman who pursues a murder suspect with no real commitment to arresting him. The little credibility of the characters and their motivations, as said, are not noticeable when we are involved in this atmosphere, conducted in the sequencing of scenes that may or may not cause fright, being those that yield this compensation for the fear created by being frightened, working because they are really very well-orchestrated, hidden to be released at the right moment when our psychological kind of gave up on them and the ones that don't, being an integral part of this process of momentary and atmospheric involvement that binds us to the film. This is because Wan's manipulation always keeps us very comfortable in terms of information that is given to us, where the director provides it on a platter, through flashbacks well fitted in the outline of the narrative, which makes us think that we are with him in the resolution of the mystery which invited us at first to participate, but actually makes it one step ahead, or at least provides a hiding place for a great piece of information, used in the climax as a twist.

    This big turnaround is built more on the effect of quickly tying everything together in the edit by reminiscing about scenes than on the surprise, the revelation itself and how it fits into the storyline. It doesn't matter whether or not it makes logical sense or not, the Dead Silence doesn't do the slightest thing, but it closes the line to what he prioritizes as terror, which is to say what is the threat. In this way, the public ignores any breach of verisimilitude and concentrates on the ultimate confirmation of Mary Shaw's dangerousness, which he sustained the atmosphere to emphasize her iconography. The icing on the cake was not proving that the story was smarter than we were invited to immerse ourselves in it - even if that is a bit of the feeling when we didn't notice the connections beforehand - but rather that we were afraid while it was. Being told. The lack of verisimilitude only fits this, as the supernatural and the unknown, which were the minimal basis for investing in the mystery, are also confirmed. Apart from Charlie Clouser's soundtrack, which even derived from Mortal Games, is very good.

    The great asset of "Dead Silence" is, without a doubt, the look. What we see on the screen is a real candy for our eyes. Everything works: the photography is chilling, the settings are extremely luxurious and the atmosphere old-fashioned. The kills are stylish, the makeup is really well done, and the special effects are great. From what our eyes see, the script could be a little more generous with our intellect, especially when it comes to the Wan/Whannel duo, much more was expected. The story, despite its immensely inspired points, is by no means innovative. Just the fact that you, when watching a movie, immediately remember another, already shows that the idea has already been used, and well explored. Any horror movie that involves puppets will take us back to "Toy Killer", which marked horror fans in the 90s. But that is not the greatest resemblance. The number of dolls, 101 in all, is unnecessary (here, 101 dolls are practically the same, and they do absolutely nothing). Despite the relative passivity of the puppets, the main one, Billy (Mary Shaw's great partner in her shows), gives the viewer good scares. But the main scene of the film, apart from the ending (which I'll tell you below), is when one of the duo's performances is shown in a flashback. It's from her that we can be sure that Mary Shaw's stories are, yes, true, and that her favorite doll isn't exactly just a doll.

    The film becomes technically interesting due to the well-known combination of James Wan and the atmosphere of a script that seeks the right light for the final immersion. The quality and guarantee of a somber presentation of scenarios proposed as belonging to this category is the bastion used here to finish the great tale about Mary Shaw with style and without burning too much the balance line between the imaginary and the real revelations that for a short period of discovery orbit the main character. Like "Saw", presents an ending that leaves any spectator awestruck (of course, not in the same magnitude as "Saw" does), and this ends up being the highest point of the plot. Despite the script's clichés and minor confusions, this is a great entertainment option for horror fans. Just don't forget one thing: "Never, ever scream!"
    8nanafanboy

    Oh my God... I missed this kind of movie.

    I thought the age of the horror movie was coming to an end. Occasionally there are a few gems (The Descent was excellent)but for the most part horror has been replaced by torture porn (saw, saw 2, saw 3, The Hills Have Eyes, and especially Hostel). Dead Silence has thankfully come to show us that Hollywood can still make a scary picture.

    This movie is a throwback to the golden age of horror films. This is a Williams Castle sort of movie... a Vincent Price sort of movie. The filmmakers realized that all a horror movie actually has to do is be scary... and that is exactly what this movie is.

    Atmosphere, jumps, startles, and eerie dolls. This movie is creepy as hell.

    A little note though... don't go into this film with the attitude that it will suck... and don't pick it apart bit by bit. Just sit back and enjoy. The movie wants to to take you on a ride. You should just strap in and feel the terror that is Dead Silence.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      (at around 1h 10 mins) During the climax, in the storage area with all 101 dolls, you can see Jigsaw's doll from the "Saw" films sitting on the floor, and Edgar Bergen's doll Charlie McCarthy on one of the shelves. The doll that Detective Lipton throws over his shoulder in this scene is a replica of ventriloquist Jimmy Nelson's doll, Danny O'Day.
    • Erros de gravação
      Jamie states that in his hometown, receiving a ventriloquist dummy out of nowhere is a bad omen. If so then why didn't he get rid of it when it arrived at his doorstep?
    • Citações

      Children's Rhyme: Beware the stare of Mary Shaw / She had no children only dolls / And if you see her in your dreams / Be sure to never ever scream.

    • Cenas durante ou pós-créditos
      The 1930s Universal Pictures logo is used in the opening credits.
    • Versões alternativas
      Unrated DVD contains the following extended shots which were omitted from the "R" rated version.
      • Mary Shaw has a creepy, disgusting, long tongue.
      • A gorier death for Henry, as Mary Shaw is shown eating Henry's tongue and saying "I now have your voice, Henry."
      • The tongue comes out and licks Jamie after the clown admits the "secret" to him about his wife.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Oh, We Review!: Dead Silence (2012)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Let It Go
      Written by Bob Mair, Dino Soldo

      Performed by Bob Mair, Dino Soldo

      Courtesy of Black Toast Music

    Principais escolhas

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    Perguntas frequentes20

    • How long is Dead Silence?Fornecido pela Alexa
    • Is the "Saw" doll in this movie?
    • What are the differences between the theatrical version and the Unrated Version?

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 26 de outubro de 2007 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Canadá
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Centrais de atendimento oficiais
      • MySpace
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • El títere
    • Locações de filme
      • Toronto, Ontário, Canadá
    • Empresas de produção
      • Universal Pictures
      • Twisted Pictures
      • Evolution Entertainment
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 20.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 16.809.076
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 7.842.725
      • 18 de mar. de 2007
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 22.382.047
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 29 min(89 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • SDDS
      • Dolby Digital
      • DTS
    • Proporção
      • 2.39 : 1

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