Demon Lazarus has collected for you the most terrible videos made in the Moscow metro. Feel all the horror that the Moscow subway keeps in itself.Demon Lazarus has collected for you the most terrible videos made in the Moscow metro. Feel all the horror that the Moscow subway keeps in itself.Demon Lazarus has collected for you the most terrible videos made in the Moscow metro. Feel all the horror that the Moscow subway keeps in itself.
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Sergey A.'s "Ghosts of the Moscow Metro" is a deranged love letter to the absurdity of paranormal TV shows, wrapped in the gritty aesthetic of underground Russian cinema. Framed as a low-budget anthology hosted by a ghoulish figure named Lazarus (reminiscent of "Tales from the Crypt"'s Crypt Keeper), the film stitches together alleged "real" footage of spectral encounters, fatal accidents, and eerie phenomena within Moscow's subway system. Shot entirely by Sergey A. In a matter of days, the film oscillates between genuine unease and deliberate camp, blurring the line between horror and parody.
Lazarus, clad in a tattered cloak and mask, introduces each segment with exaggerated gestures. His presence channels the campy theatrics of vintage horror hosts, yet his monologue amplifies the absurdity of the "found footage" that follows.
The film's grainy visuals, erratic editing, and blatantly artificial effects (e.g., floating sheets masquerading as ghosts, CGI smoke resembling Windows 98 screensavers) mock the production values of paranormal reality shows like "Ghost Adventures". Sergey A. Leans into the artifice, turning technical flaws into a satirical weapon .
Segments range from shaky cellphone clips of "shadow figures" on platforms to overdramatized reenactments of urban legends. The lack of narrative cohesion mirrors the disjointed, sensationalized nature of paranormal programming.
By presenting blatantly staged scenes as "authentic," the film critiques how media sensationalizes fear for profit. The recurring motif of blurred faces and glitchy footage nods to the ethical ambiguity of real-life "ghost hunting" shows. The subway, a symbol of Moscow's daily grind, becomes a liminal space where Soviet-era ghosts and modern anxieties collide. The subway's claustrophobic tunnels and empty platforms evoke a collective existential dread, amplified by the film's lack of human dialogue or resolution.
Sergey A. Employs a cacophony of screeching train brakes, distorted whispers, and discordant synth tones to unsettle viewers. The audio mix, however, often drowns out subtler scares in favor of sensory overload. The handheld shots of dimly lit stations and flickering lights create an authentic underground atmosphere, though the deliberate inclusion of lens flares and focus errors underscores the film's mockumentary parody.
"Ghosts of the Moscow Metro" fits within Sergey A.'s broader filmography of lo-fi, experimental horror, where minimal budgets and maximal audacity collide. It also echoes the Russian avant-garde tradition of using absurdity to critique societal norms-here, the credulity of modern media consumers .
"Ghosts of the Moscow Metro" is a polarizing experiment-equal parts brilliant and baffling. It won't terrify you, but it might make you question why we're so eager to believe in ghosts... or bad filmmaking. A must-watch for fans of underground cinema and media satire; others may find it grating. Best enjoyed with a sense of humor and a shot of vodka.
Lazarus, clad in a tattered cloak and mask, introduces each segment with exaggerated gestures. His presence channels the campy theatrics of vintage horror hosts, yet his monologue amplifies the absurdity of the "found footage" that follows.
The film's grainy visuals, erratic editing, and blatantly artificial effects (e.g., floating sheets masquerading as ghosts, CGI smoke resembling Windows 98 screensavers) mock the production values of paranormal reality shows like "Ghost Adventures". Sergey A. Leans into the artifice, turning technical flaws into a satirical weapon .
Segments range from shaky cellphone clips of "shadow figures" on platforms to overdramatized reenactments of urban legends. The lack of narrative cohesion mirrors the disjointed, sensationalized nature of paranormal programming.
By presenting blatantly staged scenes as "authentic," the film critiques how media sensationalizes fear for profit. The recurring motif of blurred faces and glitchy footage nods to the ethical ambiguity of real-life "ghost hunting" shows. The subway, a symbol of Moscow's daily grind, becomes a liminal space where Soviet-era ghosts and modern anxieties collide. The subway's claustrophobic tunnels and empty platforms evoke a collective existential dread, amplified by the film's lack of human dialogue or resolution.
Sergey A. Employs a cacophony of screeching train brakes, distorted whispers, and discordant synth tones to unsettle viewers. The audio mix, however, often drowns out subtler scares in favor of sensory overload. The handheld shots of dimly lit stations and flickering lights create an authentic underground atmosphere, though the deliberate inclusion of lens flares and focus errors underscores the film's mockumentary parody.
"Ghosts of the Moscow Metro" fits within Sergey A.'s broader filmography of lo-fi, experimental horror, where minimal budgets and maximal audacity collide. It also echoes the Russian avant-garde tradition of using absurdity to critique societal norms-here, the credulity of modern media consumers .
"Ghosts of the Moscow Metro" is a polarizing experiment-equal parts brilliant and baffling. It won't terrify you, but it might make you question why we're so eager to believe in ghosts... or bad filmmaking. A must-watch for fans of underground cinema and media satire; others may find it grating. Best enjoyed with a sense of humor and a shot of vodka.
- SmokiFursuit
- Feb 16, 2025
- Permalink
Storyline
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Призраки Московского метро
- Filming locations
- Moscow metro, Moscow, Russia(metro stations)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- RUR 60 (estimated)
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was Ghosts of the Moscow metro (2022) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer