Shy, withdrawn eight-year-old Sally has been sent to live with her architect father (Guy Pearce, The King’s Speech) and his new partner (Katie Holmes, Batman Begins) in the foreboding Victorian mansion of Blackwood Manor. Feeling isolated and alone, Sally decides to explore her sinister new surroundings with terrifying consequences. Having discovered a hidden basement she unwittingly unleashes an ancient and unholy presence… There’s something alive in the darkness and it knows her name. Something truly evil and it needs feeding. From legendary filmmaker Guillermo Del Toro (Pan’s Labyrinth, Hellboy), Done Be Afraid of the Dark is a nail-biting horror that will make you think twice about turning off the lights. Extras: - A look behind the horror - The Story, The Build, The Creatures - Character Profiles - Interviews with Katie Holmes, Guy Pearce and Bailee Madison - Teaser Trailer - Theatrical Trailer
T**A
Creepy.
A good film.
C**8
A good horror
Package arrived undamaged and intact. Arrived when it said it would, and the film played back perfectly
S**M
An unsettling, eerie and well directed film
Del Toro is renowned for delivering visually stunning and unsettling films, you only have to look at Pan's Labyrinth and Hellboy to know that he is a seriously talented and has a boundless imagination. However Del Toro acts as producer and writer on this film and allows Troy Nixey to direct, and he does so very well. The intial set up is very well done and the opening immediately instills dread and fear. He then proceeds to deliver some brilliant set pieces and makes use of Del Toro's imagination and script to draw the viewer into the creepy, gothic manor that increases the sense of fantasy, dread and horror. The protagonist, a little girl, soon stumbles upon the houses dark secret and into the basement where the ash pit of the fire place, or whatever is inside, begins to whisper to her. Nixey doesn't show the creatures immediately, instead opting to have them in partial shadow or as silhouettes beneath the bed and in the air vents. When the creatures are revealed they are admittedly not too scary, but they are disturbing in their mannerisms and desire for children's teeth. The acting is not bad, Katie Holmes is decent as the stepmother who ends up believing, Guy Pearce is alright with his role as the disbelieving father that is rather cliched but ultimately necessary. However it is Bailee Maddison as Sally who really shines.While this film is jumpy in places and offers some decent gruesome, shocking moments it never goes all out scary and makes you want to leave the lights on. But possibly this was a wise move, rather than giving us the cliched slasher, killer, blood all over the place horror we get an hour and a half of tension, well crafted chills and jumps that ultimately go on to make this one of the best creature horrors i have ever seen. Though it's got Del Toro's fingerprints all over it, Nixey does make it his own and never lets the fantasy be too overbearing and unbelievable and delivers enoughn chills and scares too keep you gripped the whole way through.Extra features include a couple of decent featurettes that explains the creating of the creatures and the story and some interviews with the cast.
T**A
Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark draws a chillingly mythical portrait but forgets to turn the lights off.
Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark paints a chillingly mythical portrait but commonly forgets to turn the lights off. Lord Blackwood. Wildlife painter, doting father and sacrificial murderer. His son kidnapped by miniature entities residing in the darkened ash pit of the manor’s basement, demanding for children’s teeth. Blackwood fails by chiseling the teeth of his housekeeper instead, ultimately leading to his untimely demise. Months later, a fragmented family consisting of an architectural father, interior designing girlfriend and depressingly introverted daughter move into the manor to restore it. Young Sally yearning to move back in with her mother whilst Kim attempts to form a parental bond with her. Alex on the other hand only concerned about his career. With Sally’s entrance awakening the mysterious creatures once more, she must confront her own fear and escape the manor before she herself is dragged into the depths of the ash pit. Locked away for eternity.Nixey’s nightmarish adaptation of the ‘73 TV film, rarely alters the original’s plot. By only introducing the daughter and modifying the origins of the mischievous creatures, writer and producer Del Toro retains the core essence of Newland’s instance, allowing attentive detail to be applied on other elements. The ornate production design, from the manor’s gothic tapestries to the whimsical labyrinthian gardens, has Del Toro’s fingerprints plagued throughout. The verminous design of the creatures, described to be folklorish tooth fairies, derived from writer Machen’s work. A name Del Toro has mentioned before for his influence on ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’ and ‘Hellboy II’. With one eye close to the project, it’s ultimately surprising why he decided to hire another individual to cover directing duties instead of himself, as the final product clearly exudes an imitation of his previous endeavours. The increasingly slow atmospheric tension as the camera swoops through the tenebrous corridors whilst sinister whispers echo across the manor. Beltrami’s strengthened score granting the restored structure life.Unfortunately, explicit modernisations within the story prevent the success of the inherent chills from creeping through. The inclusion of Sally, performed energetically by Madison whom practically held the feature together, applied an unoriginal gloss over the finished painting. A typical plot strand of adults not believing the child’s imaginative stories revolving around mystical creatures, so they send them off to a therapist etc. before they realise they were telling the truth all along. It undoubtedly makes for a predictable plot, diminishing the majority of characterised development in the process. Much of the runtime is expended on Kim’s natural motherly instinct wanting to bond with Sally, with Holmes delivering a decent performance. Sally’s hostile confrontations with the creatures representing the catalyst for their growing relationship. The ending however seems somewhat mean-spirited when the central bond is shifted onto the father whom has not cared in the slightest. Almost seemed like a waste of time. Especially when they decide to stay the night after Alex and Kim realise Sally has been terrorised by these unknown entities (fantastic parenting...).The creatures themselves succumb to overexposure, with their contorted bodies being fully introduced too early, lessening the second half’s creep factor. And an expositional scene involving a librarian, attempting to tackle the similarities between Blackwood’s unpublished artwork and Sally’s tales, was derivatively redundant considering the introductory scene. Relinquishing the majority of the mystery.Alas, Don’t Be Afraid Of The Dark is a fine folklorish fairy tale that offers just enough atmospheric chills and technical astuteness to be classed as watchable. Regrettably the plot and its fundamentally detached scares were surprisingly ineffective, which unequivocally should’ve been better executed given Del Toro’s involvement. You won’t be afraid of the dark after watching this, that’s for sure.
T**A
Good film
Value good an film
K**Y
Love
I remember watching this film when it first came out and re watched it again and I still enjoyed the story line and plot as much as the first time one of those films you can very much enjoy
P**L
clever film
excellent dvd
M**N
Silly
Absolutely rubbish and silly, a child could watch this horror
TrustPilot
2 周前
2 周前