A man sets out to prove an antique mirror is haunted.A man sets out to prove an antique mirror is haunted.A man sets out to prove an antique mirror is haunted.
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Matthew Reynolds
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10unity9
What can i say, i love the Twilight Zone style shorts (and i'd say this was akin to that sort of sci-fi /horror) but this has got to be one of the most affecting short films that i've ever seen without it having to lower itself to the reliance of gore and visual explicitness.Simply a gruelling and incredibly paranoid half hour. Shot on an obviously low budget with minimal casting and mininimal locations (i.e. one room) it achieves maximum tension and maximum freakishness without actually being overtly freaky. A completely different viewing experience from what the ordinary filmic audience is used to.The acting was superb from the main character and my only quarm with the entire production is the last few seconds could have been a little more in the same vein and less showy (not in an f/x sense but more in a well,was it him or was it the mirror? Regardless,it's one of the most (not terrifying, but i think psychologically draining would be an accurate summary) nightmarish shorts you're likely to see.Check it out now!!!! A+
Mike Flanagan's first short film is a mere exercise in the techniques that the director would incorporate into his films. Something this short film does well is the setting and psychological tension. The actor overacts too much, but in part you can feel how he is going crazy due to the evil presence of the mirror. It can be said that it is a short film with a pleasing atmosphere. It's a shame that as far as production goes, it doesn't move away from being a homemade project. Flanagan was not yet a high-level filmmaker and did not have the necessary elements for this short film to be something a little higher than a project made for a film festival. A mistake was to title this short film as the third installment of an anthology that in the end did not materialize. It would have been convenient for the short film not to have the word "Chapter 3" in the title or at least for more short films to be made focusing on Tim's tragedy that was materialized in the feature film. The Man With A Plan is nothing more than another of the many projects made by filmmakers who were just starting out and it is only suggested to see it when there is interest in studying the career of Mike Flanagan. My final rating for this short film is a 4/10.
THIS is what real inventive indie film-making is all about! Thanks to my connection to the horror review site KILLER REVIEWS.com (I'm a staff writer there), I had the privilege of finally seeing this. I'm still amazed at how much of it was based solely on building a sense of ever-increasing dread without so much as seeing a single limb hacked off and barely any blood at all!
Director Mike Flanagan reinforces the theory that still stands the test of time: it's not what you can see that really scares you, but what you CAN'T. Kudos as well to Scott Graham for a tremendous performance as a young man trying to solve the mystery of his parents' deaths and the connection the antique mirror (the focus of the story) has to what happened. No spoilers here, folks: if you haven't seen this yet at a local festival, hopefully you'll get the chance if this becomes part of a horror shorts collection in the future.
Mike Flanagan is definitely a director to watch, and Scott Graham is well on his way to following in the footsteps of great genre actors such as Jeffrey Combs and Bruce Campbell.
Outstanding first effort, and I hope to see MUCH more...
Director Mike Flanagan reinforces the theory that still stands the test of time: it's not what you can see that really scares you, but what you CAN'T. Kudos as well to Scott Graham for a tremendous performance as a young man trying to solve the mystery of his parents' deaths and the connection the antique mirror (the focus of the story) has to what happened. No spoilers here, folks: if you haven't seen this yet at a local festival, hopefully you'll get the chance if this becomes part of a horror shorts collection in the future.
Mike Flanagan is definitely a director to watch, and Scott Graham is well on his way to following in the footsteps of great genre actors such as Jeffrey Combs and Bruce Campbell.
Outstanding first effort, and I hope to see MUCH more...
Saw this at the Dead by Dawn film festival in Edinburgh and it was the best short film screened there this year in my opinion.
Essentially this is a one man show with Scott Graham alone with an evil mirror for much of the running time. While this doesn't sound particularly exciting, this growing feeling of paranoia and the increasing madness of the lone character propel the story.
Keep an eye on the video monitors that have been set up for the experiment, it's a small but very creepy touch.
Oculus is part 3 of a 9 part story. If Mike Flanagan can keep up this level of invention then I look forward to further entries.
Essentially this is a one man show with Scott Graham alone with an evil mirror for much of the running time. While this doesn't sound particularly exciting, this growing feeling of paranoia and the increasing madness of the lone character propel the story.
Keep an eye on the video monitors that have been set up for the experiment, it's a small but very creepy touch.
Oculus is part 3 of a 9 part story. If Mike Flanagan can keep up this level of invention then I look forward to further entries.
This is the short film which director Mike Flanagan made which was a precursor for his 2013 feature film starring Karen Gillan. Once again it is essentially about an antique haunted mirror. Given the short running time and low budget its perhaps not too surprising that this is a pretty minimalistic bit of work, which boils down to one man locking himself in a room set up with recording equipment in order to observe the fateful mirror. It is a bit limited given the basic set-up but Flanagan nevertheless manages to keep this involving enough, with several odd moments and some historical background on the deadly artefact.
PS: I have no idea why this is titled 'chapter 3', as there does not seem to be a chapter 1 or 2 that I am aware of!
PS: I have no idea why this is titled 'chapter 3', as there does not seem to be a chapter 1 or 2 that I am aware of!
Did you know
- TriviaThe third chapter in a planned anthology about the sinister Lasser Glass, "The Man With the Plan" is actually the first installment to be filmed. Of the nine possible chapters to shoot, Mike Flanagan and Jeff Seidman opted for this one purely because of budgetary constraints - the single character/single location nature of this chapter made it ideal. This chapter also gives the viewer a detailed history of the mirror itself, which the filmmakers wanted to include in their first film so that the other chapters would have the proper context.
- GoofsBoom mic and operator visible in Scott Graham's glasses during the entire "history" section of the film.
- Quotes
Tim Russel: I have met my demons and they are many... I have seen the devil and he is me.
- Alternate versionsEarly versions of the film featured an alternate ending in which Tim's friend Steve (Dave Levine) comes to see him after Tim stops answering his calls. Steve finds Tim near death, sitting in front of the mirror, the entire room in shambles around him. The video equipment is destroyed. Steve glances into the mirror and sees Tim's "father" perched over him, draining the life from him. Tim falls dead, Steve stumbles back in shock, and then becomes enchanted by the mirror. The earliest versions of this ending had Tim's dead body sit up and attack Steve, the later versions just left Steve staring into the glass, transfixed.
- ConnectionsReferences Ju-on (2000)
- is this short film the third part of another short film?
- Is this the basis of the 2013 film "Oculus"?
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- Oculus: The Man with the Plan
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- Budget
- $2,000 (estimated)
- Runtime32 minutes
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- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Oculus: Chapter 3 - The Man with the Plan (2006) officially released in Canada in English?
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