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Movies / On DVD / Fear(s) of the Dark
Fear(s) of the Dark

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Fear(s) of the Dark (2008)

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Reviews Counted:59

Fresh:43

Rotten:16

Average Rating:6.5/10

Consensus: This French animated horror portmanteau is monochrome and minimalist, visually stunning, but light on scares.

Rated: 12A

Runtime: 85 mins

Genre: Foreign Films

Theatrical Release:03-10-2008

Synopsis: As a storyteller, H.P. Lovecraft might have felt a tad shortchanged by this film's relative lack of tentacled beasts. As a literary critic, he would've delighted in the superficially stark,... As a storyteller, H.P. Lovecraft might have felt a tad shortchanged by this film's relative lack of tentacled beasts. As a literary critic, he would've delighted in the superficially stark, effectively visceral topography of FEAR(S) OF THE DARK, an animated French-language film that extends into modern media the exact anatomical lines of latent anxiety that were drawn by the supernatural-minded painters of the 19th century and burbled in the physiology known by Edgar Allan Poe. In a feat all the more remarkable by virtue of the fact that the movie is a collaborative showcase of six different drawing and animation styles, provocative in their very mutations, FEAR(S) manages to escape the seemingly inherent horror-anthology fate of adding up to an uneven tone. Rather than a campfire patchwork, it's an omnibus of inexplicable internal unease, a mounting abstract dread that resides in a collective temporal memory-mist and culminates in an extended passage of Kafkaesque isolation. Think of it as the history of fear. Since FEAR(S)'s six contributing visual artists come from backgrounds in illustration and graphic design and were largely new to animation when they joined the project, the film lends itself to a sort of cross-media artistic appropriation, namely the retaining of the techniques of still visuals so that those techniques might take on new artistic functions and philosophies when put into motion. In one 3-D tale of insects and the strangeness of sexual encounters, comic-book crosshatchings (meant to convey, when drawn on the page, a single instance of light refraction) oftentimes remain fixed to single spots on characters' faces even as the figures move with subtle elasticity through cartoonist George Burns's bright, alienating world of thick outlines and unnaturally limited space, effectively echoing a theme of grim stagnancy. [More]

Starring: Aure Atika, François Creton, Guillaume Depardieu, Nicole Garcia

Starring: Aure Atika, François Creton, Guillaume Depardieu, Nicole Garcia, Louisa Pili, Christian Hecq

Director: Blutch, Charles Burns, Marie Caillou, Pierre di Sciullo, Lorenzo Mattotti, Richard N. McGuire

Director: Blutch, Charles Burns, Marie Caillou, Pierre di Sciullo, Lorenzo Mattotti, Richard N. McGuire
Screenwriter: Blutch, Charles Burns, Pierre di Sciullo, Jerry Kramsky, Richard N. McGuire, Michel Pirus, Romain Slocombe
Composer: Rene Aubry, Boris Gronemberger, Laurent Perez Del Mar, George Van Dam
Studio: IFC Films

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Reviews for Fear(s) of the Dark

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21 - 40 (sorted by date; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 >> >|
Arrange By:Fresh | Rotten | Comments | Name | Source | Date
 
 

They all visualize the fears that haunt our dreams, but only McGuire brings them to full, unnerving life.

Full Review Source: Kansas City Star | comment Comment
12/05/08
Loey Lockerby
Loey Lockerby
Kansas City Star

The fear inspired by these stories is more akin to dread, a slow, creeping suspicion that something is not quite right ...

Full Review Source: Playback:stl | comment Comment
11/27/08
Sarah Boslaugh
Sarah Boslaugh
Playback:stl

Brilliantly creepy.

Full Review Source: Philadelphia Inquirer | comment Comment
11/14/08
Steven Rea
Steven Rea
Philadelphia Inquirer

All except di Sciullo's are beautifully drawn, in a variety of distinct styles.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles CityBeat | comment Comment
11/12/08
Andy Klein
Andy Klein
Los Angeles CityBeat

Although this is a commendable study in the future of animation it is not accessible enough to be entertaining. Undoubtedly better films are yet to come from this group.

Full Review Source: Monsters and Critics | comment Comment
11/10/08
Ron Wilkinson
Ron Wilkinson
Monsters and Critics

Rarely goosebump-inducing and often rather dull...but you'll become entranced by the animation.

Full Review Source: Washington City Paper | comment Comment
11/02/08
Tricia Olszewski
Tricia Olszewski
Washington City Paper

These six tales only scratch the surface of our phobic subconscious.

Full Review Source: Seattle Post-Intelligencer | comment Comment
10/31/08
Bill White
Bill White
Seattle Post-Intelligencer

Maybe different things scare the French. But I'll give them this: Prattling monologues can be unsettling.

Full Review Source: Seattle Times | comment Comment
10/31/08
Mark Rahner
Mark Rahner
Seattle Times

Fear(s) of the Dark is a feast for the eyes, even if it doesn't always get the pulse racing.

Full Review Source: San Francisco Chronicle | comment Comment
10/31/08
Reyhan Harmanci
Reyhan Harmanci
San Francisco Chronicle

This may not be everyone's idea of either scary or great animation, but it is a generally successful attempt to marry the two forms in a unique way.

Full Review Source: Los Angeles Daily News | comment Comment
10/31/08
Bob Strauss
Bob Strauss
Los Angeles Daily News

The black-and-white images are so cutting edge, you could bleed.

Full Review Source: Boston Globe | comment Comment
10/31/08
Boston Globe

Like most anthologies, has its highs and lows, but is still original and inventive enough to recommend to horror fans looking for something different - a movie that's actually trying to be scary.

Full Review Source: Movie Retriever | comment Comment
10/31/08
Brian Tallerico
Brian Tallerico
Movie Retriever

If its French origins seem too art-house for such a ghoulish season, think about the last time an American monster movie provided anything more than business as usual.

Full Review Source: Flipside Movie Emporium | comment Comment
10/30/08
Rob Vaux
Rob Vaux
Flipside Movie Emporium

Sinister and beautiful.

Full Review Source: Chicago Reader | comment Comment
10/30/08
J. R. Jones
J. R. Jones
Chicago Reader

Despite the title and the ads, this is not really a horror movie but more of a demonstration of the skills of the animators. The segments are like calling cards. Younger horror movie fans will not much identify with it.

Full Review Source: Chicago Sun-Times | comment Comment
10/30/08
Roger Ebert
Roger Ebert
Chicago Sun-Times
Top Critic Icon Top Critic

One great cartoon and a whole bunch of so-so ones.

Full Review Source: eFilmCritic.com | comment Comment
10/29/08
David Cornelius
David Cornelius
eFilmCritic.com

The fear described here is not visceral or familiar, but it is incisive. What if civilization is inexplicable?

Full Review Source: PopMatters | comment Comment
10/27/08
Cynthia Fuchs
Cynthia Fuchs
PopMatters

Even though the film deserves props and is quite an achievement, it fails on the most important level - entertainment value. I understand most artists create the work for themselves, but when you're making a movie you have to have the audience in mind.

Full Review Source: Bloody Disgusting | comment Comment
10/27/08
Brad Miska
Brad Miska
Bloody Disgusting

There isn't a dud in the 10 shorts, although some are more dud-ish than others.

Full Review Source: New York Post | comment Comment
10/24/08
V.A. Musetto
V.A. Musetto
New York Post

An arresting array of chilling images worthwhile for the scary visual effects alone.

Full Review Source: NewsBlaze | comment Comment
10/24/08
Kam Williams
Kam Williams
NewsBlaze
 
 
21 - 40 (sorted by date; UK critics are listed first)
Text View | |< << 1 2 3 4 >> >|
all

Latest News for Fear(s) of the Dark

May 25, 2009: Most chilling is the voiceover by Guillaume Depardieu, who in a real life horror that casts a shadow of its own over this production, just died suddenly and tragically. He's a withdrawn young student, the plaything of a pet insect reborn as a horny coed. Opens in new window
More...

October 24, 2008: French animated feature explores everyday phobias. Opens in new window
More...

October 19, 2008: Most chilling is the voiceover by Guillaume Depardieu, who in a real life horror that casts a shadow of its own over this production, just died suddenly and tragically. He's a withdrawn young student, the plaything of a pet insect reborn as a horny coed. Opens in new window
More...

October 19, 2008: Most chilling is the voiceover by Guillaume Depardieu, who in a real life horror that casts a shadow of its own over this production, just died suddenly and tragically. He's a withdrawn young student, the plaything of a pet insect reborn as a horny coed. Opens in new window
More...

See All

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