A man providing overnight watch to a deceased member of his former Orthodox Jewish community finds himself opposite a malevolent entity, in writer-director Keith Thomas' electrifying feature debut.
Trailer
Pemeran
Dave Davis
Yakov Ronen
Menashe Lustig
Reb Shulem
Malky Goldman
Sarah
Lynn Cohen
Mrs. Litvak
Fred Melamed
Dr. Marvin Kohlberg
Ronald Cohen
Mr. Rubin Litvak
Nati Rabinowitz
Lane
Moshe Lobel
Lazer
Efraim Miller
Hersch
Lea Kalisch
Adinah
Ethan Stone
Burech
Hunter Menken
SS Officer
Emilio Vitolo
Scott
Logan Macrae
Carson
Spencer Zender
Eric
Dun Laskey
Young Rubin Litvak
Rob Tunstall
Mazzick
Bluma Gross
Young Woman
Mungkin Anda Juga Suka
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Komentar
10 Komentar
very boring and stupid movie, do not waste time and data to download i do mot recommend. not horror just plain rubbish.
The premise had potential. That's about it. One hour into the movie, we realized the plot still hadn't moved and lacked density. Scenes worked on your nerves, but every time you expected a payoff in the form of a jump scare or plot progression, they dragged you forever. It felt like the movie was 4 big scenes. That'd be about 20 min a scene. All I'm saying is you shouldn't have to pay to catch up on your sleep.
Sorry about the title, I'm not familiar with Jewish culture and religion. As for the movie, I thought it was mostly enjoyable, but the reason for the 5 stars is because there isn't enough scares throughout the movie to call it a good horror flick.
For me in an untexted/cc edition that i saw, a language i dont know at all. the acting are average, the speed of plot slow, the score raises your neckline and the film is mysterious and overall dark visualls and content. some sound glitches in outdoor takes, where the ambient sound kills the dialouges so its not a film to scream horray for but its watchable, grumpy old man gives a 5
The premise was interesting: there's a demon that attaches himself to traumatised people, in this case victims of antisemitism. This particular demons has to exorcised following a special Jewish rite. Sadly, the movie doesn't really explore this aspect and it's mostly a slow burn with a lot of jump scares and not much backstory. The ending doesn't fully explain the situation imho and it's up to interpretation.
Set over the course of a single evening in Brooklyn's Hassidic "Boro" Park neighborhood. Having lost his faith, Yakov (Dave Davis - Greyhound) isn't eager to go back to the insular religious community he only recently fled. But when Reb Shulem (Menashe Lustig - Menashe), a rabbi and confidante, approaches Yakov after a support group meeting and offers to pay Yakov to be the shomer - a respected position of someone who watches over the body overnight to keep it from demons - for a recently deceased Holocaust survivor, he reluctantly accepts the job. Shortly after arriving at the dilapidated house, Yakov realizes that something is very, very wrong. The concept of The Vigil looks good enough on paper to get excited about. The film could've explored territories that are fairly unknown for many of us who aren't part of the Jewish community, with stories that often involve the supernatural and afterlife. Instead of turning into a 21st century "Jewish Excorcist", it rather takes the easy route and goes for a more lighter version of 'The Autopsy of Jane Doe'. The film takes place in one extremely underlit house, where creepy knocks and creaks help build an ominous atmosphere. What starts off strong quickly gets annoying when rough sound design and annoyingly ineffective jump scares take over, unfortunately losing any emotional impact the story could have created by the end of this haunted night. Director Keith Thomas seems lost in his own screenplay and never elevates what makes his first feature film stand out: the atmosphere. Those dark rooms sure raise questions, as to why Yakov doesn't turn on more lights and keep them on when he starts witnessing shadows in the corners of the room. The problem with the overpowering darkness is that at one point, that isolating feeling loses its effect and every shadow just becomes a blur. Luckily Davis knows how to handle himself, in what's basically a one-man show. The Vigil never reaches for that light at the end of the tunnel, relying too much on clichés and overused scare tactics. By keeping it all a bit too vague, it loses any sense of terror it so successfully built up in the first half of the film, making it an unfortunate mishap that could've been an unforgettable original addition to the horror genre.
source: The Vigil
