Un tueur en série emmène une nouvelle victime sans méfiance lors d'une escapade d'un week-end pour ajouter un autre corps à son compte. Elle se laisse prendre à ses faux airs et il est avide... Tout lireUn tueur en série emmène une nouvelle victime sans méfiance lors d'une escapade d'un week-end pour ajouter un autre corps à son compte. Elle se laisse prendre à ses faux airs et il est avide de sang. Qu'est-ce qui pourrait bien se passer ?Un tueur en série emmène une nouvelle victime sans méfiance lors d'une escapade d'un week-end pour ajouter un autre corps à son compte. Elle se laisse prendre à ses faux airs et il est avide de sang. Qu'est-ce qui pourrait bien se passer ?
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 nominations au total
Avis à la une
The surprise element here is whether it's the killer's mind playing games with him (after he gets hit in the head) or if he's really in a purgatory-like place where he's being psychologically tortured as punishment for the deadly sins he's committed. What also works are the two lead performances. Both Sarah Lind (as Meredith) and Josh Ruben (as Bruce) are pretty effective. While the film loses a little momentum in Act Two, the much-talked-about end credits sequence is a winner (akin to Pearl), both from the perspectives of storytelling and performances.
It is a dark horror comedy comprised of separate 'acts'. The first two 'acts' are set-up. The remainder of the movie is the pay-off, featuring psychedelic gobblydegook that is purposefully weird and pretentious.
The classical art/art snob/art dealer scene is what is being mocked/sent up here, and very well. Josh Ruben brilliantly portrays a maniac who has wholly immersed himself in art snob culture, and it is that lifestyle, and his attempts to evade blame for his evil actions, that lead to the hallucinations he experiences throughout the film.
One hallucination involving the owl figure towards the end crossed the line from amusing to outright ridiculous for me, but overall I was really into it.
Also, the entire film is tied together very neatly with an excellent end scene that continues into the end credits.
If you view this movie with the above perspective--this is what a pretentious art snob foodie who happens to be a serial killer sees--then I think you'll like it more than either just trying to enjoy a horror film or trying to find some deeper meaning.
This movie is directed by Travis Stevens (Jakob's Wife) and stars Sarah Lind (The Humanoty Bureau), Josh Ruben (Scare Me), Malin Barr (Honeydew) and Katie Kuang (Westworld).
This is one of those movies if you watch it for just the horror elements it's very entertaining. The storyline is cliche, straightforward, doesn't always make sense and just seems to be there to get to the next great horror scene...but the next horror scene is great. The kills are tremendous, gory and unique. There's a head wound sequence that's insane and very good...everything after the head wound is a bit trippy, but the hand claw was crazy, how it's used was very good, and the ending on the ground was epic and an easy 10/10 scene. The background music is good and creates several eerie circumstances and the ladies in the picture are gorgeous. The acting by Ruben is outstanding, especially at the end. I'm not sure the owl like creature did as much for this film as intended.
Overall, this is a bad movie but average horror picture. I recommend this to all horror enthusiasts as something different. I would score this a 6/10 and recommend seeing it once.
Writers Nathan Faudree and Travis Stevens, with the latter also directing the movie, put together a fair enough script and storyline. It was pretty straightforward, if actually not somewhat generic and predictable. But the added elements of supernatural horror definitely helped to spruce up the movie. It was an adequate movie, but nothing outstanding really.
I was not familiar with the cast ensemble in the movie, but I will say that leading actress Sarah Lind (playing Meredith Tanning) and leading actor Josh Ruben (playing Bruce Ernst) put on good performances and carried the movie quite nicely.
Visually then "A Wounded Fawn" was okay. It was not a movie that made use of an abundance of special effects or CGI, not that it really required such. Whatever effects were in the movie were fairly okay, and helped to promote whatever they were intended to do, so that means it was effective.
Director Travis Stevens makes use of some dark imagery throughout the course of the movie, especially in the last quarter of the movie, which adds something unique to the movie. And the costumes with the masks and the wardrobes definitely added a layer of oddity to the movie.
Watchable for what it was, however "A Wounded Fawn" is hardly a movie that I will ever return to watch a second time. If it worth sitting down and watching it, if you are an avid horror fan.
My rating of "A Wounded Fawn" lands on a five out of ten stars.
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe statue is of The Wrath of the Erinyes
- GaffesDespite using an Android phone, Meredith's text messages play sounds from Apple's iMessage.
- Citations
Meredith Tanning: Wow. This is...
Bruce Ernst: I said it was remote. Don't worry.
Meredith Tanning: I'm not worried. It's just...
Bruce Ernst: What?
Meredith Tanning: It's dark as hell.
Bruce Ernst: Well, yeah. That's just the woods.
Meredith Tanning: Yeah. No kidding.
- Bandes originalesNothing's Gonna Hurt You Baby
Written by Greg Gonzalez
Performed by Cigarettes After Sex
Courtesy of Partisan Records
Meilleurs choix
- How long is A Wounded Fawn?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 31 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
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