Rusty Messages: 1184 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
Anybody seen this movie? It sure lingered on with me having watched it the other day. It's a psychological, metaphysical quest of a new world family cast out of their Jamestown type of colonial fort, to fend for themselves in the new world wilderness of New England. Slowly they are beset by evil taking their children, their crops and their minds by an entity(s) in the dark woods. Dialogue all in the period of Shakespearean English tongue. I had to switch on captions to understand. Thou art taken with the story unfold. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQXmlf3Sefg
I saw it a couple of years ago or so. I figured it would turn cheesy, but it was surprisingly well-done. I like horror films that slowly build rather than those that rely solely on jump scares. A mix of both is perfect. The film was praised for using the appropriate vernacular for that time period, but I would've liked it better with modern language. That's just a mild criticism from me because it was easy enough to follow. Caleb was an interesting character and enjoyable to watch. I hated the ending though!
Rusty Messages: 1184 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
It was very well acted I thought. Capturing what one would imagine the period of history was like. Brutish and short. The language helped I thought. I don't mind captions. Many fine foreign films I've seen with it. The ending didn't bother me too much, though a pity. As the young maiden was suspect of being touched by the evil's plans. Another soul to add to it's collection. I guess the screenplay was an amalgamation of the time period's fable's and folk tales. Glad you confirmed it's quality. Fine cinema.
It's funny how the English language has evolved over the years to the point where you need translation to understand some of it. I haven't seen the movie yet (The premise is right up my alley) but when I do, I'll start without the subtitles and go from there.
If you have a period piece movie like that, you should have the language native to the era.
Rusty Messages: 1184 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
Can you imagine how someone from that era would be perplexed with our language of today? How would they interpret, "Yo dog, wassup?" Anyway, part of my problem was due to the lousy fidelity of my newish smart tv speakers. Since the covid lockdown, I've shelved my quest to find a decent soundbar for the smart tele. You might catch on with the Shakespeareian dialect better than I could. Give a review, good or bad if you watch it.
Rusty Messages: 1184 Registered: May 2018 Location: Kansas City Missouri
Illuminati (3rd Degree)
I can understand not being pulled into such a period piece. That language is verily.... Difficult. And sure, the dark woods are a big part of folklore and many tales in print and celluloid. That's what this production was culled from. Folklore and spooky tales from the period. Some folk like super hero and slasher films. To me, a genre done to death. This is sort of a departure from that.