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Peur(s) du noir

  • 2007
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Peur(s) du noir (2007)
This is the theatrical trailer for Fear(s) of the Dark, a six-segment film from directors Blutch, Marie Caillou, Pierre DiSciullo, Lorenzo Mattotti, Richard McGuire, and Charles Burns.
Play trailer1:39
2 Videos
13 Photos
Adult AnimationBody HorrorSupernatural HorrorAnimationHorrorMystery

Several scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles appeal to our fear(s) of the dark.Several scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles appeal to our fear(s) of the dark.Several scary black-and-white animated segments in different styles appeal to our fear(s) of the dark.

  • Directors
    • Blutch
    • Charles Burns
    • Marie Caillou
  • Writers
    • Blutch
    • Charles Burns
    • Pierre Di Sciullo
  • Stars
    • Aure Atika
    • Guillaume Depardieu
    • Nicole Garcia
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Blutch
      • Charles Burns
      • Marie Caillou
    • Writers
      • Blutch
      • Charles Burns
      • Pierre Di Sciullo
    • Stars
      • Aure Atika
      • Guillaume Depardieu
      • Nicole Garcia
    • 22User reviews
    • 75Critic reviews
    • 69Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 5 nominations total

    Videos2

    Fear(s) of the Dark: Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 1:39
    Fear(s) of the Dark: Theatrical Trailer
    Fears Of The Dark: Attacked (Exclusive)
    Clip 1:10
    Fears Of The Dark: Attacked (Exclusive)
    Fears Of The Dark: Attacked (Exclusive)
    Clip 1:10
    Fears Of The Dark: Attacked (Exclusive)

    Photos12

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Aure Atika
    Aure Atika
    • Laura
    • (voice)
    Guillaume Depardieu
    Guillaume Depardieu
    • Eric
    • (voice)
    Nicole Garcia
    Nicole Garcia
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Gil Alma
      François Créton
      François Créton
      • The teacher
      • (voice)
      • (as François Creton)
      Sarah-Laure Estragnat
        Nicolas Feroumont
          Arthur H.
          Arthur H.
          • Narrator
          • (voice)
          Christian Hecq
          Christian Hecq
          • The doctor
          • (voice)
          • …
          Christian Hincker
            Lino Hincker
              Melaura Honnay
                Amélie Lerma
                  Florence Maury
                    Adriana Piasek-Wanski
                      Louisa Pili
                      Louisa Pili
                      • Sumako
                      • (voice)
                      Amaury Smets
                        Brigitte Sy
                        Brigitte Sy
                        • Eric's mother
                        • (voice)
                        • Directors
                          • Blutch
                          • Charles Burns
                          • Marie Caillou
                        • Writers
                          • Blutch
                          • Charles Burns
                          • Pierre Di Sciullo
                        • All cast & crew
                        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

                        User reviews22

                        6.63.2K
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                        Featured reviews

                        7meddlecore

                        An Anthology Of Animated Short Horror Stories.

                        Peur(s) Du Noir (Fear(s) Of The Dark) is an anthology of short animated horror films, from a series of directors, in a variety of different styles.

                        Some are broken up, and act as transitions, while others are more episodic in nature.

                        But most are in black and white...and revolve around the themes of dreams vs reality and the torture of nightmares.

                        In the first main story, a curious introvert finds an oddly humanoid looking insect, that he takes home to study.

                        However, it escapes...and disappears.

                        He eventually goes off to college, and it seems to have tagged along with him.

                        Because, when he gets a girlfriend...she wakes up with an odd gash on her arm.

                        As her personality starts to change...it becomes evident the creature has infiltrated her body.

                        She becomes more and more masculine...and much more dominant.

                        And soon enough...he's become the experiment...

                        The second film, takes place in Japan.

                        A young girl immigrates to a new town, and a new school, where she is systematically bullied by a group of her cruel classmates.

                        They subject her to all manner of tortures, both mental and physical...until she goes mad.

                        Or, is the truth, really, that she is being tortured in an asylum, by a cruel doctor, who manipulates her dreams into nightmares?

                        Either way...these experiences become her reality.

                        And it all ends in suicide...or, is it murder...?

                        In the third film, we watch as a boy from the great plains witnesses a series of attacks and disappearances from the sidelines.

                        His best friend provides the narration, until he too disappears.

                        But was he the next victim, or the culprit all along?

                        Some dark actor in the guise of a human child?

                        In the end, a witch hunt leads to the death of an alligator...and it becomes venerated, like a saint...to keep the evil away...

                        The fourth, and final, episode has us following a man (who looks Russian) as he comes home to a dark house, only to get drunk and pass out, while reading a book.

                        His recent experiences are reiterated in his onsetting dreamstate, where he watches a lost love slice his neck from behind...as if he were an apparition, witnessing his own death.

                        When he awakens, he burns the book and photograph that haunt his dreams.

                        But he can't escape his own thoughts.

                        So he investigates the house further, to check if there is an ominous ne'er-do-well lying in wait to kill him as he sleeps.

                        Now, his paranoia is getting the best of him in the form of pareidolia.

                        And it becomes obvious that he is the greatest danger to himself.

                        The transitionary shorts include a film about an evil old miser who is walking a pack of vicious dogs, which he let's loose to torture unsuspecting townsfolk; and an abstract film about what happens when you let your fears and anxieties take hold of your identity.

                        I quite enjoyed this, as the animation styles are diverse and all around excellent.

                        With some great storytelling to boot.

                        7 out of 10.
                        ohm_intern

                        Shown at Sundance Film Festival '08 - slightly spoiler

                        The story begins with what appears to be an old, sadistic British general walking a pack of angry dogs. A dog gets away and chases a small boy... thus beings one of a few stories of people's fears. The fears displayed in these animated segments usually involve an insect or animal beast. I think that the director either had a fascination or fear of bugs/animals.

                        In between each segment, a soothing french voice tells us her "fears" but what I interpret as her observations and cristicms of society and social behaviors.

                        One segment, a man is haunted by a praying mantis; in another, a girl is possessed by the ghost of a samuarai, in another.. a man has an encounter with the ghosts of an abandoned house.

                        Each segment has a unique art style where people's bizarre fears become their lives. A great artistic representation of how people's fears can so easily become part of their reality - whether those fears are overcome or succombed to.
                        4BA_Harrison

                        A stylish but empty animated anthology.

                        Macabre anthology Fear(s) Of The Dark showcases the animated work of several international designers, comic book artists, and illustrators, all working within the confines of a black-and-white palette.

                        The first tale, instantly recognisable as the work of celebrated illustrator Charles Burns, tells of an introverted young man who overcomes his shyness to romance classmate Laura, only for his new girlfriend to become host to a freaky mantis-like insect that alters her personality. Burns' unmistakable bold graphic style is brought to life with the use of 3D computer animation.

                        Next up is Marie Caillou's anime-style ghost story that sees a young Japanese girl repeatedly sedated so that she can finish a freaky dream in which she is menaced by the spirit of a samurai and several Yōkai monsters.

                        Story number three, by Lorenzo Mattottifrom, revolves around a small French town that is plagued by a mysterious man-eating creature which lurks in the marshes.

                        Richard McGuire makes excellent use of high contrast light and shadows for the final chapter, which features a traveller seeking refuge from a blizzard in an abandoned house where he is haunted by the ghosts of the previous occupant.

                        As a fan of bizarre movies, comic art, anthologies and animation, I was quite excited to see this weird little film, but other than demonstrating an interesting range of creative styles and techniques, I wasn't particularly impressed: the wholly unrelated segments are atmospheric but lack narrative cohesion, a severe case of style over substance. A framing narrative, in which a creepy man unleashes his vicious hounds on a series of unfortunate innocent victims has no bearing at all on the tales it bookends, while a pretentious narrator who philosophises between tales as abstract shapes morph before our eyes only serves to bore and irritate.
                        9newhealthrock

                        chequered dread

                        After seeing Fear(s) of The Dark I think I can safely say I was as, or more, affected than I have ever been after watching a film. Not since the horrific denouement of Haneke's original Funny Games do I think I have even come close to being as physically shook up as I was after seeing this film. A collaboration between six graphic artists and animators, I suppose if it must be distilled into the crudest possible collision of reference points it could be summarised as Stephen King meets Waking Life (Richard Linklater's 2001 film composed of rotoscope animation vignettes) yet that doesn't come anywhere close.

                        The artists who have visualised nightmares for this project are Philadelphia native Charles Burns, ubiquitous to graphic novel fans due to his masterly disturbing book Black Hole; former Liquid Liquid bassist Richard McGuire; Belgian resident Marie Caillou; Christian Hinckler (better known by his pseudonym Blutch), and Italian Lorenzo Mattotti. Interspersing these animated tales are kaleidoscopic dancing patterns which are, through their hypnotic abstractions, perhaps the most visually mesmerising sequences in the whole film. These patterns are set to the vacuous middle-class fears and worries of a bourgeois woman, and the insubstantiality of her worries sets a theme which extends throughout the film. None of the fears represented in any of the narrative threads are viable. They are all tales of terror which one wouldn't have been surprised to find lurking in a battered Goosebumps paperback in the late nineties. This doesn't matter, though, because the film's power lies in its incredibly paced orchestrations of image and sound.

                        After a joyously Gothic title sequence in which the film's name flashes on the screen at least five times (in a barrage of words reminiscent of Godard at his most poetically despotic) we are presented with an introduction to Blutch's storyline, which extends throughout the film. A hellish figure dressed in the clothes of a 18th century dandy roams a barren landscape with a pack of ferocious canines, hunting down unsuspecting victims and then proceeding to violently rip them apart (the last of which is a remarkably gory sequence). Ironically, considering the content of these scenes, Blutch's animation style is most reminiscent of either Raymond Briggs (In the constant shimmering of his charcoal textures) or the Walt Disney studios house style (In the fluidity of his characters' movements).

                        Charles Burns and Lorenzo Mattotti present two sequences which are most reminiscent of scary bed-time stories, both being narrated in first-person. Visually, though, they couldn't be more different. Charles Burns' is, as you might imagine, the most like a moving graphic novel. The art is unmistakeably his, very clean-cut black lines without any grey, and the pictures tell the story of a conscientious student who embarks on a love affair with a girl which descends into an insectoid hell in a methodical, coherent style. Mattotti, on the other hand, tells the story of an eerie beast terrorising a small pastoral community in a free-and-easy sketchy style, with images that swim in and out of view like a dream.

                        This is not the best representation of a bad dream within the film, though. That accolade goes to Marie Caillou, who presents to us an Oriental phantasm. A macabre inversion of a Studio Ghibli fantasy which gets more surreal as it proceeds, a young girl is tormented by dangers both real and imaginary. Not since The Mystery Man talked to Bill Pullman at the party in Lost Highway has a nightmare been so well orated on screen and it had a large majority of the audience locked in a collective terror.

                        While Caillou's segment had an undeniable effect on the viewers, the last sequence, by Richard McGuire, is perhaps the most powerful of them all. Employing nothing but block black-and-white shapes to tell the story of a man who is haunted in a house by a mysterious woman, for the most part of his segment he eschews all non-diegetic music. The audience is thereby made extremely sensitive to every single movement made by the objects on screen and so the slightest motion, such as a hat-box dropping to the floor, causes the heart to skip a beat.
                        Sylviastel

                        Interesting!

                        This compilation of short animated films in one movie begins with the narrator stating their deepest fears from a various places. Shot mostly in black and white with animation, the film can be dark, funny, evil, and thought-provoking at times but it lacks connection to the relations with the other short films. While I enjoyed the college student's romance with a troubled college girl, I wanted to find out more. Then there is the girl afraid of the samurai in Japan. The boy whose friends and uncle go missing and a crocodile in the mix. I don't have a favorite at the moment. They all seem to be both chilling, dark, and even light at times. I do find this film interesting for the most part. The six different directors and their visions of fear taking over is quite a unique premise but there are some issues regarding translation and connecting them all together like a giant puzzle that hurts the film.

                        Related interests

                        Seth Green, Mila Kunis, Alex Borstein, and Seth MacFarlane in Les Griffin (1999)
                        Adult Animation
                        Jeff Goldblum in La Mouche (1986)
                        Body Horror
                        Daveigh Chase in Le Cercle : The Ring (2002)
                        Supernatural Horror
                        Daveigh Chase, Rumi Hiiragi, and Mari Natsuki in Le Voyage de Chihiro (2001)
                        Animation
                        Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
                        Horror
                        Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
                        Mystery

                        Storyline

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                        FAQ17

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                        Details

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                        • Release date
                          • February 13, 2008 (France)
                        • Countries of origin
                          • France
                          • Belgium
                        • Language
                          • French
                        • Also known as
                          • Fear(s) of the Dark
                        • Production companies
                          • Prima Linea Productions
                          • Cofinova 3
                          • La Parti Productions
                        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

                        Box office

                        Edit
                        • Gross US & Canada
                          • $77,876
                        • Opening weekend US & Canada
                          • $6,103
                          • Oct 26, 2008
                        • Gross worldwide
                          • $450,813
                        See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

                        Tech specs

                        Edit
                        • Runtime
                          • 1h 23m(83 min)
                        • Color
                          • Black and White
                        • Sound mix
                          • Dolby SR
                        • Aspect ratio
                          • 1.85 : 1

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