A group of LA twenty-somethings are lured out of the city and out into the wilderness in search of a rave, a hot girl, and good times. Instead, they encounter an ancient evil; a demon capabl... Read allA group of LA twenty-somethings are lured out of the city and out into the wilderness in search of a rave, a hot girl, and good times. Instead, they encounter an ancient evil; a demon capable of possessing humans. As the demon passes through the group, each becomes both killer an... Read allA group of LA twenty-somethings are lured out of the city and out into the wilderness in search of a rave, a hot girl, and good times. Instead, they encounter an ancient evil; a demon capable of possessing humans. As the demon passes through the group, each becomes both killer and victim. As their numbers dwindle the question arises: can they stop this malevolent spir... Read all
- Boris
- (as J. Scott)
- Neko
- (as Noell Pittman)
- Martin
- (as Torrey Lawrence)
Featured reviews
This film has possibly the lowest rating of any film I have seen in a long time. For whatever reason, Netflix suggested it to me with a very high probability of my liking it. But I knew in the first two minutes that it was a bad movie. Thanks, Netflix.
The volume of speech versus music is obnoxious, the plot is terrible until the second half. In fact, the first half spends a good deal of time focusing on a rave that nobody care about. The special effects are nothing to brag about (and the film almost could have been better if they never used any effects at all). I was hoping the old, grainy look would add atmosphere... but it did not.
Failure, failure, failure.
"The Awakening" was well executed on many levels. The first thing that I noticed was the film's look. The cinematography looked good with a good amount of contrast without being overbearing and a wide variety of shots. Most of the film was shot relatively unsaturated which gave it a slightly grey, uneasy color. Juxtaposing the unsaturated look with the more vivid, friendlier moments helped build the desired suspense.
Editing for "The Awakening" was a bit unusual, out of the mainstream, with cutting that I can only describe as a hybrid of Edgar Wright movies ("Hot Fuzz," "Scott Pilgrim vs. The World") and television sitcom "Scrubs." This created almost a throwback film but with a new age feel that was different without being abrupt.
The movie's subject matter will likely affect some people's interest. The film is definitely geared towards a younger audience. It does include swearing and mildly graphic imagery which won't deter most youth. This isn't the kind of film you would want to take your grandmother to, or, in some cases, your mother. It is a strong 17 to 30 film which can reach beyond that age group.
The plot worked around a demon/god possession concept which Rotonda and Schaefer take beyond the cliché exorcism films.
The acting in the film was well executed with the majority of the cast delivering strong, natural performances. The chemistry between Donovan (Brian Schaefer) and Amanda (Emersen Riley) was great as their characters' relationship progressed in an unforced way. Also the character of Roy (Kevin Lowe) played a funny and hapless protagonist throughout the film. Lowe's facial expressions alone could tell a story.
The soundtrack was another highlight of this film; the music fit the story progression with a great alternative rock sound.
Overall the film delivered on all the levels to be expected. Its foundation was strong with plenty of background information. It is good, and if you're a fan of indie films, I suggest you get the chance to see it.
There just isn't much going for this film. Bad dialogue, horrible editing, and worse acting; this film contained all the necessities of a qualifying to be a feature presentation on Mystery Science Theater 3000. I wanted to make a little cut-out version of Joel, Crow, and Tom Servo to attach to the bottom of my screen to feel like I justified sitting through 34 whole minutes of this wreckage!
I get that it's quite possibly a student film, so I couldn't give it the 1 star that it truly deserves. I give them a 3 star for their effort.
I like indie films just fine, but this one is on the level of a student film, and an average one at that.
I'll give them credit for trying to create hip banter between the protagonists, however there are just too many issues with the quality of the production to get past the first 10 minutes.
Poor acting Clichéd dialog Poor sound (music too loud, dialog too low) Choppy editing
One character in particular that is supposed to be menacing is completely unconvincing and just comes off like an overweight doofus.
I cannot recommend this movie.
Did you know
- TriviaThe outdoor scenes in the town of West Proctor and the grocery store scene were shot on a set left over from the canceled TV series Jericho.
- GoofsAfter Katie is shot, you see her blink and move her left hand when Donovan nudges her.
- SoundtracksPinchi Puto
by Quemadios
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 23m(83 min)
- Color