Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

10 Cloverfield Lane

10 Cloverfield Lane review
2016
8
Director: 
Dan Trachtenberg

SYNOPSIS: 

A young lady named Michelle gets into an auto crash and rises and shines with a chain on her leg in a puzzling room. Before long a while later, Howard strolls in and advises her they are underground on the grounds that there has been an atomic assault, and he spared her life. Howard, Michelle and one other man there with them all stay under the order of Howard. Michelle is suspicious that he could have abducted her. Confronted with Howard's controlling and threatening nature makes Michelle need to get away. Subsequent to taking matters into her own particular hands, the young lady at last finds reality about the outside world.

REVIEW: 

At the point when Cloverfield touched base on the extra large screen in 2008, nothing was thought about the J J Abrams-delivered beast film. 

No curve balls there: from the web fuelled tricks encompassing TV demonstrate Lost to the express lockdown on spoilers for Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens, Abrams delights in conjuring up secret and interest. 

Indeed, even by all accounts, be that as it may, new film 10 Cloverfield Lane was made under a cover of ­military-review mystery. Indeed, even the cast didn't comprehend what they were taping – it was given a distraction title – until shooting was under way. Its exceptionally presence was just uncovered two months before discharge. 

Relinquishing the discovered film style of the past film, this is a by and large extraordinary prospect – more a turn off than direct continuation. 

A chamber dramatization, an elusive ­psycho-thriller, it plays on fears that numerous Americans appear to have about being attacked or ­attacked. 

Mary Elizabeth Winstead stars as Michelle, a young lady who, after a short sweetheart escaping introduction, awakens from a fender bender to get herself tied up in a cell in an underground dugout. Her dreadful captor, Howard (John Goodman), has watched out for her injuries – yet discloses to her she can't clear out. 

In the hands of a chief, for example, Eli Roth, such a situation would have slid into a horrible torment/exact retribution flick. Be that as it may, this film, co-composed by Whiplash's Damien Chazelle, plays reckless with class desires. 

At the point when Howard clarifies that there has been some sort of assault that has left the air tainted, and that he saved Michelle, she normally declines to trust him. Be that as it may, a kindred dugout tenant, amiable neighbor Emmett (John Gallagher Jr), appears to authenticate Howard's story. 

To state significantly more would give away the film's various turns, yet make a big appearance executive Dan Trachtenberg remains in charge in these colossally claustrophobic ­bunker-set scenes that frame the heft of the film. 

Specific credit goes to Goodman, who hasn't been this startling since Barton Fink. However there are snapshots of cleverness, as well, easing the strain and far expelling it from the inauspicious agnosticism of other post-whole-world destroying survival stories, for example, John Hillcoat's The Road or Xavier Gens' The Divide. 

Now, you might be meandering what on Earth this needs to do with Cloverfield, something a CGI-substantial act answers. Kind of. 

In truth, that finale doesn't exactly satisfy the prior barometrical scenes, however Winstead is ordering as a champion in the vein of Alien's Ripley, conveying an execution that ought to at last place her in the general population ­consciousness. 

Flipping amongst awfulness and science fiction easily, this is a film loaded with winded, heart-halting minutes, regardless of the possibility that the "Clover-verse" confining gadget never entirely persuades.

OTHER MOVIES REVIEWS

Strait-Jacket

1964

The film we are talking about is based on a story by the writer Robert Bloch, author of the famous horror masterpiece Psycho, a name that immediately evokes shivers and uneasiness. This film, however, is not supported by a particularly complex plot or by special effects that lift the skin, but rather by the extraordinary talent of the leading actress, Joan Crawford. In one of her last performances, Crawford stands as a central and dominant figure, a colossus of emotions that manages to convey to the viewer every single thrill, every anguish, every delirium that pervades... Read More

The Hand

1981

A young Oliver Stone directs his second film, once again in the horror genre, in which the protagonist is an artist who faces a progressive psychotic deterioration, which will lead him to increasingly confront his dark side. Some moments are visually powerful, such as the use of black and white in the dream sequences; the violent scenes are well shot and satisfy fans of the genre. The whole thing is guided by the mastery of Michael Caine, who in this role can fully express his "histrionics", still managing to make it effective. The plot, although rather simple and at... Read More

The Last Man on Earth

1964

The film, based on the famous novel by Richard Matheson I Am Legend, manages to recreate the atmosphere of the book well, despite the limited budget. The Italian director Ubaldo Ragona does a better job than the more famous Boris Sagal, who made The Omega Man a few years later. This is probably due to the fact that Vincent Price, very comfortable in an Italian co-production, surpasses the talented Charlton Heston. With his usual theatricality, Price offers a performance reminiscent of silent films, particularly effective in the part where he is alone, for half the film.... Read More

Repulsion

1965

The film is a thriller full of tension, especially in the scenes where the protagonist experiences hallucinations. The horror atmosphere, with a touch of surrealism, is really intense. Although it may seem crude, this is intended by the director, who wants to show the harsh reality of the protagonist's life. The story tells of a woman in crisis, who no longer feels comfortable with the old values of society. This leads her to confront a harsh and chauvinistic reality, where she feels the weight of being a woman. The protagonist is alienated and desperate, aware that the... Read More

Don't Look Now

1973

A suggestive and deeply layered reinterpretation of a universal fairy tale like Little Red Riding Hood, which finds in its protagonists, Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie, two extraordinary interpreters. However, the director eludes any predefined scheme, escapes conventions and leads the viewer on a labyrinthine, almost subliminal path. What on the surface seems like a parapsychological horror, complete with a hunt for a serial killer, actually turns out to be a work of extraordinary complexity: an investigation into the reworking of grief within a couple, into the... Read More