A-Z Movies Database

Drag Me to Hell Review

"Drag Me to Hell" reviews

Movie
Drag Me to Hell
Author
anonymous
Date reviewed
2009-11-02 22:16:29
Rating
3.5/5 3.5 stars
Provider
CinemaSource
Review

WHAT IT'S ABOUT?

Christine has a doting boyfriend, a good job and much promise until she refuses to extend the overdue home loan of Mrs. Ganush, a strange one-eyed Gypsy woman who literally begs to keep her residence of 30 years. The ambitious Christine doesn't budge and the woman unleashes the horrendous curse of the Lamia on the unsuspecting banker turning her life into hell on Earth. When she goes to a psychic to reverse the curse, her entire existence is turned upside down, becoming a living nightmare with no light at the end of a very dark tunnel.

WHO'S IN IT?

As Christine, Alison Lohman gets to chew the scenery like there's no tomorrow. Living an actor's dream, Lohman gets under the skin of this wickedly cursed girl and gives it her all in one harrowing sequence after another. Justin Long has the standard thankless role of her understanding, but perplexed and confused boyfriend. Playing it straight, he basically stands on the sidelines watching his girlfriend go slowly mad. As Christine's boss, David Paymer is all business while Dileep Rao, as the all-knowing seer Christine turns to in her most dire time of need, is quite effective in a handful of scenes. Stealing the show lock, stock and barrel though is unquestionably the veteran TV character actress Lorna Raver, who is aptly named Mrs. Ganush she is stark-raving mad. The character is blissfully over-the-top (and then some), and Raver, under mounds of scary-as-hell makeup, hits it out of the park.

WHAT'S GOOD?

Returning to his celebrated roots in horror, Spider-Man director Sam Raimi (The Evil Dead) is clearly in his comfort zone as he delivers one of the best examples of the genre seen in many years. Although some CGI trickery and puppetry is employed to full effect, Raimi manages to get his best jolts with expert use of camera angles, creeping shadows, blowing wind, strong visual flourishes, amped up sound effects and a brilliantly vivid musical score from Christopher Young. Raimi shows today's purveyors of "torture porn" you don't need graphic violence to scare the crap out of an audience — just talent. Hitchcock would have approved.

WHAT'S BAD?

The PG-13 rating probably forced Raimi's hand in turning on the juice and REALLY dragging us through hell in a couple of scenes so we're hoping there's an uncut DVD special edition coming along eventually.

FAVORITE SCENE?

There are many to choose from including a classic dinner scene with the boyfriend's parents, but for pure intensity, the initial bank and parking garage encounter between Lohman and Raver has lots of teeth (so to speak) and is still sending chills down our spine. Also, the creepy use of a ''nosey'' fly pays dividends through the entire film for the ultimate audience freakout.

NETFLIX OR MULTIPLEX?

Drag yourself to a multiplex. A fright flick that is this much fun deserves to be seen in a packed theater.

Hollywood.com rated this film 3 1/2 stars.

Copyright © CinemaSource 2009.

Movie
Drag Me to Hell
Author
anonymous
Date reviewed
2009-05-27 09:01:53
Rating
3/5 3 stars
Provider
Review

It's apt that the Drag Me To Hell features a train towards the end of the film, as this is a cinematic ghost ride - a haunted house complete with cheesy scares, goofy grins and a smattering of well timed thrills by a master showman who knows exactly how to make you shriek.

Drag me to hell is Sam Raimi’s long awaited return to the horror genre that made him. The evil dead franchise established him as one of horrors greatest directors, but the genre must have thought they had lost him following his success with the Spider-Man films.

He's back though in this slight but incredibly assured horror film. Refreshingly, it’s an original tale - no remakes here. Alison Lohman plays an ambitious loan officer who reluctantly refuses an old lady a loan in a bid to show she is tough enough for the Assistant Manager position.

Unfortunately for her, the old lady is a mysterious gypsy who places a curse on the loan officer. Aided by a sceptical boyfriend (Justin Long in a winsome role) and a psychic, she finds out she has three days bays before her soul will be sent to hell.

Raimi quickly gets the pesky set-up out of the way to concentrate what he does best. And that is gleefully imposing loud, in your face and extreme tongue in cheek set pieces as often as he can.

It sure aint subtle but it is a hell of a lot of fun.

Copyright © 2009.



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