Exoticalot
People are voting emotionally.
Mjeteconer
Just perfect...
Married Baby
Just intense enough to provide a much-needed diversion, just lightweight enough to make you forget about it soon after it’s over. It’s not exactly “good,” per se, but it does what it sets out to do in terms of putting us on edge, which makes it … successful?
Nicole
I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
foutainoflife
This is better than an average low budget movie that I will be recommending to friends.The acting and transitioning of scenes are the only real complaint that I have. It was just lacking that polished feel that you really want to see in every movie you watch. Some scenes were noticeably overacted and, personally, when I see overacted moments it really distracts me from the investments I have made towards the characters and subject. I was building that captivation and then became distracted and I really wished I could've kept that throughout the entire film. With that said, it wasn't so bad that I wanted to stop. I did stay interested. The best thing about this movie was the story it was telling. I absolutely loved the story. So much that I think that this is a movie worth remaking with a much larger budget. There is so much more that could be done with the right financial backing. This is also the type of movie that could spawn sequels. If you have the opportunity, check it out. It's not the best quality but it will hold your attention and it is worth watching.
Cynthia Sarob
This is not a masterpiece but it was not too bad. It's unusual and I liked that idea. Some things don't make sense while watching but will become more clear later on.Gory enough for its genre but not many jump scares. This movie does have a story line and I enjoyed that.You have your stereotypical hot blonde, useless but handsome enough husband and a creep next door. The acting was OK although the creep could have been creepier. Not convincing enough but solid.It's a 7 for me. I watched it till the end. Not the potential for a new favourite but not too bad either.Try that one if you like new ideas and keep guessing what's wrong there or why things happen.
Kingkitsch
I only see one review here on IMDb of "Come Back to Me" that mentions the source material for this mid-level horror flick. The real deal is this film's source, "The Resurrectionist" written by one twisted man, Wrath James White. Having read the book quite a while back, it came as a surprise that someone was audacious enough to attempt filming it. That being said, it came as no surprise that White's uber-nasty novel was stripped of nearly everything except the basic plot line. Luckily, the film redeems itself during the last twenty minutes by not conpletely changing the end of the story. You'd have to read the novel to find out what really happens. White's novel is of the "extreme horror" genre. The authors that make up this cadre write books designed to turn stomachs. There is no atrocity, sexual perversion, or degradation these guys won't put on the page. Tanker trucks are needed to supply the gore. Extreme horror is not for the squeamish or faint. "The Resurrectionist", however, for all it's bloody excesses had a unique plot, which is the only reason the film version CBTM works at all. This looks and feels like a Lifetime afternoon movie. Dale, the creepy instigator of all the unpleasantness isn't fleshed out well. His backstory is integral to the plot, yet it's glossed over here in one flashback and one exposition by his mother. We only know he can bring the dead back to life and uses this power to sexually abuse people, kill them, and resurrect the victims who have no memories of the assaults. Like "American Psycho" some years back, the novel could not be filmed as written. Both books were incredibly nasty pieces of work that brought pornographic levels of mutilation and murder to the reader. Trust me, Dale was up to a lot more in the novel, and used everyone for his twisted sex. Including the husband.Many characters are missing from this film version, it's watered down to only a few people who figure out the whole mess fairly quickly. A number of plot holes exist in the narrative. The tension in the novel came from a longer time line in which the main female character began to remember some of what happened to her. This is seen briefly in the film but is rushed, like everything else. The ending was kept, but again, the horrendous bloodbath that ended the novel is nowhere to be seen. The film ends with a superfluous shot of a baby sired by Dale out of one of his victims. Smells like a sequel set up, but White only wrote the one book. I can't spoil the end of the novel for someone who might be curious and read it, but suffice it to say, no baby is involved. It's something much, much worse.So, "Come Back to Me" is a tepid telling of White's book. It undoubtedly gives some shivers for viewers, which is a testament to the power of White's imagination.
rajivness
This movie is a mashup of Nightmare on Elm Street, Paranormal Activity, The Entity and Halloween. This is a low budget movie with relatively good casting but poor directing and weak script.The movie is about a girl who has nightmares of being assaulted - but wakes up in a different place and in different clothes - suggesting that she was moved. She gets pregnant in the process which makes the hubby furious since he's sterile and thinks his wife is cheating on him.The main problem is that you already know who the villain is very early on - because of the creepiness of the character. The only remaining piece to the puzzle is how the event happens.I'll save you the bother of watching this sleeper. The creepy neighbor did it. He did it by killing his victim after he raped her and then bringing her back to life - which removes the memory of the assualt - kind of like the date rape drug. The story had potential - but should have been developed further including the one - dimensional characters.