ReaderKenka
Let's be realistic.
PiraBit
if their story seems completely bonkers, almost like a feverish work of fiction, you ain't heard nothing yet.
mraculeated
The biggest problem with this movie is it’s a little better than you think it might be, which somehow makes it worse. As in, it takes itself a bit too seriously, which makes most of the movie feel kind of dull.
Anoushka Slater
While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
maximumkate
Well I could have told you that this was not for everyone right from the outset, but this was really original.First of all, there are two types of acting - the first and most common is cinematic acting in which the camera is in cahoots with the actor. There is nothing particularly authentic about it in terms of how actual people speak or act, though through the medium of film it can nonetheless communicate truth in a sort of heightened reality way.The second and far more uncommon is the sort of naturalistic performances you find here, which - save for the moments of supernatural or psychological abormalcy - approximate how people tend to speak and talk. It is always amusing to find this in movies (almost always independent ones) and people to criticize the acting because they're not getting the acting school diction and perfectly clean dialogue you're used to in Hollywood films. Here, as in real life, people occasionally trip over a word, or insert "likes" in the irritating but actual way people do in real life.But we're in not in Hollywood. We're in New Orleans, and the really commendable thing that happens here is the filmmakers allow New Orleans to be as it is today. Most films that take place in New Orleans either visit the city's past, or blot out what defines its present: tourists, modern buildings, modern cars. The choice to approach things this way was either conscious or a matter of budget, but in any case it actually works to further the film's atmospheric goals: we exit cinematic space and feel like we're watching all of this business happen to actual people. I kept feeling like there was something eternal and percolating under the modernity that transforms locales as the times change: sure every trapping of modern life is there, but then, so is the New Orleans of our imaginations. And which is stronger, and which will outlast the other? The movie stops being "fun horror" and starts being genuinely hostile to the audience as it rolls on, and I mean that in the best way.The camera is often slightly unsteady - no tripod for much of it, and instead mostly hand-held (and notably, not always - steady shots and slow zooms are interspersed as scenes require). The camera work here really amplifies what is happening in a way which is difficult to describe.The effect is that as the audience, I felt like a ghost watching this bizarre tale happen to complete strangers - you feel invisible, but present. The camera is pushed up way into the action as if we're a few feet away for most of it. It feels voyeuristic sometimes and even kind of invasive.There aren't any jump scares here. There's no horror movie pattern to latch on to; something inscrutably terrible is happening, and we are right there in these rooms and beds watching it in a way which feels fairly illicit. Definitely not for everyone but as far as I am concerned a very effective and even anti-Hollywood piece of independent horror. There is no way they'd get away with this in the mainstream.I liked it a lot.
Michael Ledo
Jo (Josephine Decker) lives with Kate (Isolde Chae-Lawrence) and Jo's father (Thomas Francis Murphy) who needs a cigarette and a drink to get started. He lives in part of the kitchen on a mattress behind a curtain. Jo gives haunted tours and is into playing witchcraft. She is troubled by the drowning death of her mother when she was seven, giving us a long river of life metaphor in the beginning. Most of the disjointed film was predictable except that last 5 minutes which will tie the movie together for some people while others will simple raise their arms and go WTF! The camera work was bad, similar to a found footage film.The plot, what there was of it, was laughable at times as was Miss Decker's performance, especially that end part in the city. They had a medium which had Zelda's face, but wasn't into the role. At the end Kate and Jo's father are shot in daylight contrasting this to a night time shooting of Jo. Perhaps by design, as her river was in a dark place metaphorically....Hey! I'm trying to be nice here.The good news is that is is well worth a punch on the hacker's card.Guide: F-word. FF sex. Nudity (Josephine Decker FF, and some tattooed chick briefly)
manuelasaez
One of the slowest, poorly acted, mundane, simplistic films I have ever seen, it barely qualifies as a real movie and more like a made-for-TV special. It looks home-made, like the director used a hand-me-down camera, and the acting was very community theater. The story was almost non-existent, and the SFX was laughable. "Daughters of the Plague" sounds like a great title for a movie about feminism, yet it was wasted on this garbage. Sad.