Watch horror Movies for free with Amazon Prime

The Shrine

The Shrine Review
2010
6
Director: 
JON KNAUTZ

SYNOPSIS: 

A group of young journalists investigate a cult said to practice human sacrifice, but their ambitious ways may lead them to becoming the cult’s next victims.

REVIEW: 

The Shrine is the type of film that comes complete with lots of familiar horror tropes an avid genre lover will recognize. You’ve got the mysterious disappearance of a traveler under mysterious circumstances, as well as a team of people seeking answers as to the details of those circumstances. You’ve got a remote village in a foreign land populated by strange people who raise an eyebrow or two thanks to their mysterious beliefs and practices. Scares, jumps, and mysteries abound as the protagonists attempt to make sense of it all.

Given those facts, the plotline of The Shrine no doubt seems like something you’ve seen a time or ten before. This is especially the case after the film opens on a fittingly shocking note, leading you to believe you already know where it’s going. However, it’s best to go into your viewing experience with an open mind, as there’s actually a lot more to this film than meets the eye. The Shrine is a Canadian horror movie directed by Jon Knautz (The Cleaning Lady). It stars Cindy Sampson, Aaron Ashmore, Ben Lewis (Stir of Echoes: Homecoming), and Meghan Heffern.

If you’re a fan of horror movies that are great at absolutely leading you to believe you know what’s going on only to surprise you a couple of times along the way, you’ll dig The Shrine. There are definitely elements of other “traveler in distress” films you’ve seen over the course of your life as a horror fan (like Hostel and its sequels). However, there are enough twists and turns you probably won’t expect to keep you very pleasantly on the edge of your seat as well.

Director Knautz does an excellent job of building suspense and creating an appropriately dark, intense atmosphere for viewers to sink their teeth into. Some of the visuals and scenes in The Shrine – including a couple of otherworldly dream sequences that definitely hit the mark -- are genuinely scary and very unnerving. There’s also plenty to see for genre fans who love their gore, shocks, and special effects. This isn’t a big budget film by any stretch of the imagination, but it’s so resourcefully done that it’s easy to forget that.

Certain creative choices as to how the film was handled make it easier than average to put yourself into the shoes of the protagonists. The characters are well fleshed out for a movie of this type, and the cast turns in a collection of well-executed performances. You’re not left feeling like they’re making decisions you would never make if you were somehow plunged into the same set of circumstances.

Knautz also elected to have the locals who populate the remote Polish setting actually speaking Polish. However, he does not clarify what they’re saying for the audience with subtitles as one might expect in a Polish horror movie. Unless you happen to speak Polish yourself, you’re left to make sense of what’s going on the same way the protagonists do – by analyzing body language, tone, and context. This definitely helps add to the sense of displacement, as well as helps to put the viewer right there in the middle of the action.

SIMILAR MOVIES REVIEWS

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