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IMDbPro

The Rain

  • 2009
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
3.8/10
470
YOUR RATING
The Rain (2009)
Trailer for Dark Fields
Play trailer1:23
1 Video
3 Photos
Horror

Follows three generations of a curse farming community that turn to human sacrifice to appease an evil that haunts the rain.Follows three generations of a curse farming community that turn to human sacrifice to appease an evil that haunts the rain.Follows three generations of a curse farming community that turn to human sacrifice to appease an evil that haunts the rain.

  • Director
    • Douglas Schulze
  • Writers
    • Kurt Eli Mayry
    • Douglas Schulze
    • Mark C. Schwarz
  • Stars
    • David Carradine
    • Richard Lynch
    • Dee Wallace
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.8/10
    470
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Douglas Schulze
    • Writers
      • Kurt Eli Mayry
      • Douglas Schulze
      • Mark C. Schwarz
    • Stars
      • David Carradine
      • Richard Lynch
      • Dee Wallace
    • 13User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Dark Fields
    Trailer 1:23
    Dark Fields

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top cast37

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    David Carradine
    David Carradine
    • Clive Jonis
    Richard Lynch
    Richard Lynch
    • Karl Lumis
    Dee Wallace
    Dee Wallace
    • Jean Applebe
    Jeff Beorger
    • The Reverend - 1950
    Christopher Bondy
    • The Reverend
    Derek Brandon
    Derek Brandon
    • Daniel Jonis
    David G.B. Brown
    • Boyfriend
    James Howard Carr
    • Ben Wheeler
    J.J. Chidiac
    • Simon Wheeler
    Paula Ciccone
    • Eleanor Lumis
    Peter Coady
    • Sheriff
    Adam Cooper
    Adam Cooper
    • Dell's Boy
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    • Dell's Boy
    Guy Copland
    • Dell…
    Colin Crenshaw
    • Jack Lumis
    Didrik Davis
    • Townsman
    Jimmy Doom
    Jimmy Doom
    • Horace
    Maddie Dorsey
    • Mandy Applebee
    • Director
      • Douglas Schulze
    • Writers
      • Kurt Eli Mayry
      • Douglas Schulze
      • Mark C. Schwarz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    3.8470
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    Featured reviews

    UNOhwen

    'Can this day get any worse?'

    So said this character in this cheese-ball from hell.

    'Yes, my dear,' MUCH worse - if you sit and waste ANY time watching this poorly acted. Ridiculously plotted nightmare.

    There's no words to describe how dreadful this is.

    In a nutshell: Town has poor (pun?) rain.

    So, they sacrifice kids. Evil spirit, then more rain probs, then the current residents of this rain-challenged place has the rain - and evil - probs themselves.

    One simple idea that's NEVER thought of: MOVE!!!

    This is one move where the sound-cues - so important, but, so rarely noticed in most films - are on prominent display - and I'm not saying that in a kind way.

    The only way you 'sense' bad things, are from the 'ominous' music: creepy tinkling on a piano, or 'jug-bottle whistling sounds - all the cliché's are on PROMINENT display in this muck.

    Not ONE of the people in this (other than Keith Carradine) , has any sort of a career - before they made this, and, I'd seriously doubt, if they ever would.

    It's like the director went and got...friends-of-friends-of-friends together, and said; 'hey! You ever thought about being in a movie?'

    A typical scene of 'ominous approaching bad;' the girl, who only moments earlier was sweet, fun, wearing white, shows up all in black - eye makeup, et al. Then, her mobile rings. Tight close-up of mobile, while 'ominous chord' plays.

    I'm only guessing here, but, I think I found the TRUE reason Mr. Carradine passed away - this was coming out.
    6LeonLouisRicci

    Spirited Low-Budget Horror

    There is a very good Horror/Supernatural Movie in here somewhere. It has excellent Cinematography, some eerie Make-Up effects, and a feel of the unreal. But in its ambitious attempt to tell a Story spanning three Generations of a cursed Community, something got submerged.

    It is unnecessarily muddled and confusing and with some attentive Editing and a different structure, this one could have been a real Sleeper. Presented here, it is laborious, much too long, and the pacing is just too slow.

    It is worth a watch for Fans of Horror and low budget experiments. There is some real Talent at work here behind the Camera, but its the Composition and flow that defeats this good try. This is some heavy going and is intriguing, but could be more homogenized.
    2p-stepien

    Story better than the bite

    Set across three generations of inhabitants of the small town of Perseverance, comes a story not done justice by the flimsy direction and wooden acting. This eerie and suspenseful tale about a village haunted and cursed by wickedness contaminating their rain, ends up ringing hollow despite some good cast choices. Rain the purifier becomes the touch of death. The whole event is initiated in the late 1900s, as the village, led by Clive Jonis (played by the ever-charismatic genre old-timer David Carradine) enters into a pact with a devilish shaman. This in turns has bloody repercussions many years in the future as human sacrifices are necessitated by the need for rain.

    Inside the story lurks some great potential with a creepy top-hat taking centre stage, while Tiren Jhames as the ominous Mr Saul brings the beast delivering a superb character. However, most screen times is wasted on some truly appalling child acting, who one-by-one spiral the movie into oblivion, leaving just singular moments and short-lived spine-crawling elements. Surprisingly disjointed it also features superior technical qualities depending on specific sub-stories, with acting, lighting and overall feel superior during the turn of the century story thread.

    The story also becomes undone by the basic premise, which suggests that longing for life would corrupt the soul to such an extent, that mothers and fathers would willing dispose of their own kin. The concept itself seems so far-flung, thus only underlining the low production qualities, probably forced by budget limitations.
    10loveablejohn-46629

    A Different Kind Of Horror Movie

    This movie had a well written script and outstanding special effects plus the cinematography was excellent. It also had several well known actors and they did an outstanding job along with the rest of the cast. Also on the DVD I watched there was an outstanding commentary track by the director along with animated storyboards,a deleted scene and behind the scenes footage which all worth watching.
    10Hedocrity

    Dark Fields delivers

    It's said that horror fans aren't a very discriminating bunch. And given the volume of crap horror movies out there, I can't argue that. But I also take offense to it. I'm a life-long horror fan, and I regularly bypass the uncreative slashers and nauseatingly unoriginal remakes that populate the field these days. I like a quality, original horror film. And "Dark Fields" fits that bill.

    Inspired by Shirley Jackson's short story, "The Lottery", the film's story interweaves three narratives, each taking place in the aptly named town of Perseverance, each in a different time period – the 1880's, the 1950's, and the present day. The residents of Perseverance are oppressed with a curse. Each year they suffer an affliction to their bodies and a drought to their land, the only cure for which is to sacrifice three of their children.

    Three things make this movie rock.

    First, director Doug Schulze's visual flair, accomplished through a knack for unique and effective composition, creepy art direction, and occasionally gruesome special effects – both of the practical and CGI variety. Schulze displays an inventiveness here that belies a great effort not usually seen in films at this budget level; in all instances above he regularly puts original ideas on the screen. I found his concept for the physical affliction of the curse to be especially satisfying, especially in its final form on female lead Sasha Higgins, and in the grisly teeth-pulling scene (which I watched from between my fingers). Cinematographer Lon Stratton's dark, moody photography – utilizing both Super 35 and the then-new Red One 4K digital camera -- effectively augments the layered visuals.

    Second, the cast. Icons David Carradine and Dee Wallace Stone deliver. Both have faces you could watch read a phone book, and Schulze uses their gravitas to anchor their segments. Richard Lynch, too, is a standout as a tortured father witnessing his daughter succumb to her initial affliction of the town's curse.

    And third, the story. I went into "Dark Fields" with trepidation, knowing it was an anthology piece. Anthologies always leave me dissatisfied – I'm not a short film fan and they always feel like a string of shorts to me. But "Dark Fields" employs a unique structure, in which the three stories unfold simultaneously, climaxing in the resolution of the curse in the present day. They interwoven narratives build towards this common end, along the way each telling a unique story with a common theme. It gets a little confusing sometimes -- and it demands your attention -- but it works.

    "Dark Fields" is low-budget indie horror, and like most entries in that populous sub-genre, the seams occasionally show. But the trade-off is its originality. Not Hollywood product, this. I'll call it a thinking person's horror film, in that it's not for the mentally lazy. There isn't a lot that's spelled out in simple terms, and little immediate satisfaction; things generally come to fruition at a deliberate pace. But you do get the feeling that you're in the hands of a storyteller who knows his craft and will deliver. Go into it knowing that and you'll be a (discriminating) fan.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 25, 2009 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • MySpace page
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Rain Chronicles
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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