It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Discussão de filmes; a arte pela arte.

Moderators: mansildv, waltsouza

User avatar
waltsouza
Moderador
Posts: 3698
Joined: March 19th, 2005, 8:26 am
Location: Sobreda, Terra dos cães e dos gatos
Contact:

It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by waltsouza »

Image


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3235888/?ref_=nv_sr_1
For 19-year-old Jay, fall should be about school, boys and weekends out at the lake. But after a seemingly innocent sexual encounter, she finds herself plagued by strange visions and the inescapable sense that someone, or something, is following her. Faced with this burden, Jay and her teenage friends must find a way to escape the horrors that seem to be only a few steps behind.

TRAILER




Este filme esteve no MoteLx mas não cheguei a vê-lo.
Estreia dia 27 de Março nos E.U.A
User avatar
waltsouza
Moderador
Posts: 3698
Joined: March 19th, 2005, 8:26 am
Location: Sobreda, Terra dos cães e dos gatos
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by waltsouza »

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/it_follows/

Há quem já lhe chame o filme de terror do ano (apesar de 2015 ainda ser um ano bebé), ou mesmo o melhor dos anos mais recentes.
Helldr
Fanático
Fanático
Posts: 520
Joined: July 24th, 2012, 8:24 am

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by Helldr »

Também já ouvi dizer que é dos melhores dos últimos anos a par do Babadook.
User avatar
waltsouza
Moderador
Posts: 3698
Joined: March 19th, 2005, 8:26 am
Location: Sobreda, Terra dos cães e dos gatos
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by waltsouza »

Para espiçar o interesse (ou talvez não). :-)))
A smart, relentlessly chilling thriller that opts for originality over cheaply rejiggered jolts.

Michael Rechtshaffen
Los Angeles Times
Mitchell puts a twist on familiar tropes, enhanced by Rich Vreeland's eerily atmospheric electronic score and witty references to horror-meisters from George A. Romero to John Carpenter.

Michael D. Reid
Victoria Times Colonist (B.C., Canada)
A relentless working of the nerves done with techniques cribbed from the avant-garde.

Matt Prigge
Metro
Though visionary, David Robert Mitchell's film abounds in undigested ideas and dubious sexual politics.

Ed Gonzalez
Slant Magazine
Just when it seemed that there would never be another original teen horror movie comes this rough-edged but pleasingly creepy American indie ...

Damon Wise
Radio Times
A first-rate horror movie, It Follows adds a new monster to the pantheon.

Kim Newman
Empire Magazine
...one of the most inventive, exciting, and truly frightening horror flicks to come around in ages.

David Nusair
Reel Film Reviews

Já chega. Acho que já perceberam a ideia. :biggrin: Mas também não deixa de ser verdade de quanto maior é a expetativa, maior pode ser a queda.
Helldr
Fanático
Fanático
Posts: 520
Joined: July 24th, 2012, 8:24 am

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by Helldr »

Será que isto vai estrear cá no cinema?
User avatar
waltsouza
Moderador
Posts: 3698
Joined: March 19th, 2005, 8:26 am
Location: Sobreda, Terra dos cães e dos gatos
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by waltsouza »

Helldr wrote:Será que isto vai estrear cá no cinema?
Duvido. Não vejo nenhuma major importante por detrás disto. Hum... Não me cheira.

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3235888/com ... _=tt_dt_co

E eu tive oportunidade de ver o filme no MoteLx 2014, o filme passou por lá. grr-)
Mas tudo bem. Melhores dias (e escolhas) virão. Eu também era rapazinho para ir ver isto ao cinema.
Salgueiro
Fanático
Fanático
Posts: 883
Joined: November 24th, 2006, 10:47 pm
Location: Porto

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by Salgueiro »

Também estou muito curioso para ver este filme. Fiquei logo atento a este realizador quando vi o seu primeiro filme "The Myth of the American Sleepover", um filme independente na linha do "Dazed and Confused".
Cinema Asia - A minha página Facebook sobre cinema asiático.
Image
pedrojamess
Entusiasta
Entusiasta
Posts: 248
Joined: May 5th, 2013, 1:28 am
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by pedrojamess »

Estou tão ansioso, até escrevi um artigo no meu blog com o intuito de fazer com que todas as pessoas tenham conhecimento sobre esta obra prima.
É pena não estrear em Portugal, de certeza que iria merecer o dinheiro do bilhete.
Cinema, Música e outras cenas: https://umalienaos20.wordpress.com/
User avatar
waltsouza
Moderador
Posts: 3698
Joined: March 19th, 2005, 8:26 am
Location: Sobreda, Terra dos cães e dos gatos
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by waltsouza »


IS DAVID ROBERT MITCHELL'S WORD-OF-MOUTH SENSATION THE 'DONNIE DARKO' OF OUR TIME?


With more than $8.5 million at the box office over four weekends, writer/director David Robert Mitchell's moody new horror film "It Follows" may not be a sleeper hit on the order of a bona fide blockbuster like "Scream," but since its release in only four theaters in early March, it's transformed into a tidy small-scale success that no one could have predicted just a month ago. Like Wes Craven's 1996 self-aware slasher, the critically-acclaimed fright flick is a true word-of-mouth sensation; it raked in so much money in limited release that distributor Radius-TWC put off the film's planned VOD debut and gave it a wide release in over 1,600 theaters.

To what can we attribute this unlikely good fortune? For starters, "It Follows" is good -- very good. Along with Jennifer Kent's masterful 2014 supernatural scare machine "The Babadook," "It Follows" has arrived like a breath of fresh air in a genre currently littered with endless dumb sequels ("Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension," "The Purge: Anarchy," "Insidious: Chapter 3"), remakes ("Poltergeist," "Carrie") and lifeless, middle-of-the-road spins on classic monsters ("I, Frankenstein," "Dracula Untold").

It also boasts surprisingly strong replay value, much of which can be attributed to Mitchell's insistence on leaving the film's thematic underpinnings open to audience interpretation. It's a stance that lends the film an intriguing aura of mystery and, much like Richard Kelly's 2001 cult film "Donnie Darko," makes it well suited to multiple viewings.

Will a better horror film come out in 2015? It's certainly possible, though if I were a betting man I'd put my money on "It Follows" remaining at the top of the heap come December 31. Below are six reasons why the frighteningly-good new film will be tough to beat this year.

1. The flawless cinematography

In a genre flooded with cheap-looking found footage fare, it's always refreshing to see a formally classic film like "It Follows" come along. Mitchell has cited John Carpenter's use of the 2.35:1 aspect ratio as an influence (though unlike Carpenter, he wasn't able to use "true" anamorphic lenses), and it can be seen in the film's gorgeous use of the widescreen format. The much-heralded single shot that opens the film immediately calls to mind Carpenter's "Halloween," with its crisp, tree-lined suburban streets and elegant gliding camerawork. Hell, the classroom scene alone appears to be a direct nod to an early moment in that 1978 trailblazer. Throughout, Mike Gioulakis' painstaking cinematography harkens back to a time in horror cinema when individual freeze frames were themselves works of art.



2. The hair-raising score

Composed by Rich Vreeland (a.k.a. Disasterpeace), the film's pummeling, often atonal score creates a claustrophobic, propulsive sense of doom from the very first scene, leaving us fittingly off-balance as the life of our heroine Jay (Maika Monroe) begins to unravel in the face of an inexplicable evil. Though some have understandably compared Disasterpeace's work here to John Carpenter's self-penned "Halloween" score, what immediately sprang to mind for me was Goblin's work on Dario Argento's "Suspiria," which similarly throttles us right from the get-go. Whatever Vreeland's influences (he has also cited composers Krzysztof Penderecki and John Cage as informing the film's sound), it's one of the most memorable musical accompaniments to a horror film, or really any film, in years.



3. Maika Monroe's performance

I was so bowled over by Monroe's performance here that I immediately Googled her name after returning home from the theater. Did you know she used to be a professional kiteboarder? Did you know she also starred in last year's well-received Adam Wingard thriller "The Guest"? The actress absolutely kills it in this movie with her big frightened eyes, unforced sex appeal and formidable ability to project utter terror. When she stammers "I think there's something wrong with me" later in this scene, you believe it.



4. The oddly fascinating Yara

The young cast in the film is uniformly good, but as supporting characters go Yara (Olivia Luccardi) is the most interesting. With her giant glasses and bizarre pale-pink clamshell e-reader device -- on which she's seen diving in to Dostoyevsky's "The Idiot," naturally -- the character is by far the quirkiest, most fascinating member of Jay's Scooby gang. Part geeky '80s best friend character, part woozy hipster, part unapologetic slob (our first introduction to her culminates in a well-timed fart -- an early indication that the film will defy all the well-worn "teen scream" cliches), as a collection of character traits she's the embodiment of Mitchell's singular, anachronistic, deeply weird vision of post-adolescent hell.

Image

5. The gleefully anachronistic production design

What universe is this, exactly? Mitchell has previously stated that the film's sense of time and place is intentionally jumbled -- "Those [anachronistic elements] were all used to place the film a little bit outside of time, like in a dream or a nightmare," he told Filmmaker magazine -- and it was a brilliant directorial choice that further points to the director's unwillingness to ground his vision in the world of standard slasher fare. From old-school 1970s TV sets (playing old-school black and white horror movies) and retro soda cans to the almost complete lack of modern technology (we see only one cell phone in the entire film), "It Follows" truly takes place in its own subtly strange world.

6. Its rare thematic depth

If you were to look at a still of the young-adult group at the center of "It Follows," you likely wouldn't expect the film to play much differently than, say, the Michael Bay-produced board game adaptation "Ouija." But beneath the film's rather ordinary surface qualities lies a universe of subtext that has given rise to a number of theories as to Mitchell's ultimate thematic intent. Perhaps the most rampant interpretation is the "'It'-as-STD" theory, but that seems the most simplistic explanation of a film that seems to be trying at much more than that.

More intriguing is the idea that "It" represents the young protagonists' awakening sense of their own mortality, as exemplified by a closing scene in which a hospital bed-ridden Yara quotes a passage from Dostoyevsky's "The Idiot" that reads in part: "When there is torture, there is pain and wounds, physical agony, and all this distracts the mind from mental suffering, so that one is tormented by the wounds until the moment of death. And the most terrible agony may not be in the wounds themselves but in knowing for certain that within an hour, then within 10 minutes, then within half a minute, now at this very instant—your soul will leave your body and you will no longer be a person, and that this is certain. The worst thing is that it is certain."

Tying in with that theory is this quote from an interview Mitchell gave to Defamer: "It's about waiting for something terrible to happen and that on some level, that might be worse than when something terrible does happen. A lot of the movie is structured around the dread an anxiety that the characters feel in the spaces in between things happening or between the monster arriving. You still feel the presence of the monster even in those moments because it could show up at any time."

Other theories on the film's thematic significance include but are not limited to:

- A Puritanical meditation on the dangers of random sex (a reading that Mitchell has deemed "offensive");

- A metaphor for the financial crisis ("Even the financial crash is evoked by the way the curse functions like a sexual Ponzi scheme that could collapse at any minute, something reinforced by the symbolic value of shooting the film in Mitchell’s home city of Detroit," writes Alistair Harkness in the Scotsman);

- A metaphor for the terrifying transition into adulthood, the responsibilities of which typically begin looming like a piss-covered demon-woman shortly after high school (evidence for this theory lies in the group's foray into the big, bad city of Detroit in the film's final third, and Yara's reflection on being forbidden from venturing beyond "8 Mile" as a young girl);

- A rumination on our fears of intimacy;

- A take on the idea of our interconnectedness in the age of social media;

etc. etc.

As I mentioned before, given the incredible number of theories that have sprung up in the wake of "It Follow's" theatrical release, the film could in many ways be pegged as the "Donnie Darko" of its time -- a low-budget, auteur-driven indie effort that traffics in dread and formalistic beauty while inviting endless speculation around its true thematic purpose. Credit must go to Mitchell for his unwillingness to spell it all out --  though in the various interviews I've read I get the impression that even he isn't certain of what it all means.

http://www.hitfix.com/news/6-reasons-it ... at-in-2015
pedrojamess
Entusiasta
Entusiasta
Posts: 248
Joined: May 5th, 2013, 1:28 am
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by pedrojamess »

Não vejo a hora de assistir a este filme!!
É uma pena Portugal estar a desperdiçar obras de terror interessantes e diferentes como "It Follows" ou "Unfriended" :roll:
Cinema, Música e outras cenas: https://umalienaos20.wordpress.com/
PanterA
DVD Maníaco
DVD Maníaco
Posts: 2701
Joined: February 21st, 2012, 12:14 am
Location: Viseu

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by PanterA »

Gostei. Posso não ter gostado tanto como a critica que o meteu num pedestal, mas achei o conceito super interessaste. Não mostra nem inventa mais que aquilo que é importante para o ritmo da história fluir normalmente. Como não caiem na tentação de dar uma explicação ou racionalizar aquilo que está acontecer, mas apenas se singram a um simples facto: está acontecer. E desde desse ponto característico e bem desenvolvido, tudo gira à volta da sobrevivência, da interpretação dos medos como da própria morte, e claro tentar perceber o impossível.

Isto tudo com uma fotografia onde conseguem enquadrar genialmente os planos, com o recurso por vezes a belos tracking shot's, e ainda a própria câmara criar o susto como todo aquele grande ambiente envolvente. Um trabalho notável, onde depois a OST tem um grande peso na importância de realçar e perturbar o espectador naqueles momentos aflitivos sem caírem no erro de a usarem para criar um falso-susto.

Agora, mesmo depois do que disse no 1º parágrafo, admito que o filme tinha pano para muitas, e muitas mangas. Não sei se foi para agradar a um certo tipo de massas mais jovens, mas o realizador perdeu aqui uma grande chance de fazer a sua obra-prima para quem esta é apenas a sua segunda longa-metragem.

Estava indeciso entre o 7.5 e 8, mas depois do filme assentar passado algumas horas desde que o vi, leve definitivamente o 8.

PS: Acho que o erro, e depois daquilo li para trás e pela net, foi pensarem que vão ver sangue a tripas a jorrar para o ecrã, e no entanto levam com quase um thriller/suspense onde para muitos nada acontece. Nessa perspectiva acredito que tivessem ficado bastante desiludos com o filme. Já eu no entanto, conhecia ZERO dele e saí super satisfeito.
pedrojamess
Entusiasta
Entusiasta
Posts: 248
Joined: May 5th, 2013, 1:28 am
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by pedrojamess »

It Follows

Ficou aquém das minhas expetativas!
A fotografia é bela, as interpretações principais são boas e o argumento tem potencial mas deveria ser mais negro e intenso... Quanto à banda sonora, que é um dos elementos mais elogiados pela crítica especializada, posso afirmar que está revela-se boa mas é totalmente inadequada para um filme de terror. Na minha opinião é um dos factores culpados pelo pouco terror do filme.
Tem potencial mas vagueia entre o indie e o comercial, precisava de adquirir um tom próprio e tinha o caminho livre para atingir esse objetivo.

Espero que hollywood faça uma sequela do filme com um tom dark e uma forte carga de violência psicológica e algumas bizarrices... Só peço apenas uma sequela e que não iniciem um franchise.

Definitivamente tinha potencial, mas "It Follows" revela-se numa obra que vagueia entre um tom indie e um tom comercial. Não é mau mas não é bom, no entanto aconselho a verem.

Nota: 6/10
Cinema, Música e outras cenas: https://umalienaos20.wordpress.com/
PanterA
DVD Maníaco
DVD Maníaco
Posts: 2701
Joined: February 21st, 2012, 12:14 am
Location: Viseu

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by PanterA »

Não. Fazer uma sequela iria estragar completamente todo o propósito dele como as suas temáticas. Saber apenas o desconhecido, sem saber o porquê da sua própria essência, foi o verdadeiro clímax do filme.
pedrojamess
Entusiasta
Entusiasta
Posts: 248
Joined: May 5th, 2013, 1:28 am
Contact:

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by pedrojamess »

PanterA wrote:Não. Fazer uma sequela iria estragar completamente todo o propósito dele como as suas temáticas. Saber apenas o desconhecido, sem saber o porquê da sua própria essência, foi o verdadeiro clímax do filme.
Eu acho que tinha potencial para ser uma das melhores obras de terror da história do cinema, deviam produzir algo que eliminasse as imperfeições deste filme e que não tivesse medo de ir mais longe.
Existem várias sequelas que conseguiram ser superiores ao filme original. :wink:
Cinema, Música e outras cenas: https://umalienaos20.wordpress.com/
PanterA
DVD Maníaco
DVD Maníaco
Posts: 2701
Joined: February 21st, 2012, 12:14 am
Location: Viseu

Re: It Follows (2015) - David Robert Mitchell

Post by PanterA »

Com disse na minha review, também achei que tinha um potencial tremendo, e mais, ser "A" obra-prima daquele realizador que apenas vai para o seu 2º filme.

Em relação á sequela, continua na minha. A haver uma desmitificava completamente tudo aquilo que este passou. A haver outro filme do género, que fosse num género de prequela. Talvez fizesse mais sentido.
Post Reply