Wednesday 10 April 2019

TRAVEL TO MOVIES: PET SEMATARY


Directors: Kevin Kolsch , Dennis Widmyer
Cast: Jason Clarke , John Lithgow , Amy Seimetz , Jeté Laurence , Lucas Lavoie , Suzi Stingl
Plot: Dr. Louis Creed has just relocated from Boston to rural Maine with his wife Rachel and their two young children. They later discover that the woods hide a mysterious burial ground deep in there. Creed`s life turns horrific when one day tragedy strikes and he turns to his odd neighbour, Jud Crandall, for help. Crandall points him towards the burial ground and Creed`s actions afterwards unleashes an unfathomable evil.


My Movie Review: The movie is more suspense than horror you can look not scary as others! Pet Sematary is tense it has a chilling effect most of the time it creates terror for the one who's haunted by the past and the pet rising from the dead to parent grieving process to losing child! Stephen King's dark tales are to look out for whether it's a hit or missed they bring something to the table that always terrifies yet give us shocking truth you never know exists until realized:) The curse started with a disturbed cat which once friendly fluffy kitty that found dead in the side of the street that was buried beyond the pet sematary on the uphill entry point to the other side! Following the event an accident that change everything in a split second saving the younger child and leaving the elder child in the road hitting by a large truck's tanker without noticing her! That's the movie highlight what comes after is rage of a father longing for a daughter resulting in a more bizarre turns that make their family undead- left us wanting more on what's to come:)

Movie News: Stephen King and Hollywood have never exactly been strange bedfellows, but there’s no question that the master of horror is flavour of the month right now. And while there are plenty of King works that remain unadapted (The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, Revival, and From A Buick 8, to name) perhaps inevitable that we've reached the full-blown remake stage of the Kingnaissance. Pet Sematary is, without question, King’s darkest, bleakest, most sobering novel much so that the author has confessed that he once thought of not publishing it. A pitch-black examination of grief and madness, with the most heartrending thing any parent can go through the death of a child at its core, it’s been made once before for the big screen, in the guise of Mary Lambert’s lurid 1989 version. But thirty years have passed, co-directors Kevin Kölsch and Dennis Widmyer to tell the tale with some twists including one fairly major change that increases the physical threat' but is much less horrifying than the original version:0

Source: https://www.empireonline.com/movies/pet-sematary-2019/review/

No comments:

Post a Comment