So yeah, drunk assessment for Josh:
It has its moments, and as a three-time world champion of the jizzolympics, you will no doubt appreciate the film on a different level than most.
The film really does a fine job when it is keeping the supernatural elements at arms length.
Once it brings in the outside assistants into the family, like Len Shaye and the two ghost detectives, it begins to lose steam (though I tip my hat to the fact that they even acknowledge the point of view of a skeptic in a somewhat reasonable way for five seconds before it is all torn away by the usual plot mechanics of the genre). And then, the mention of astral projection/mental telepathy/bingbingbingbingbangpopcorn happens and it situates itself in the quiet hamlet known as Laughableville.
So if you're down for a creepy hour-long film and a "AWW SHIT NAW" second half, then this is the one for you.
It has its moments, and as a three-time world champion of the jizzolympics, you will no doubt appreciate the film on a different level than most.
The film really does a fine job when it is keeping the supernatural elements at arms length.
Once it brings in the outside assistants into the family, like Len Shaye and the two ghost detectives, it begins to lose steam (though I tip my hat to the fact that they even acknowledge the point of view of a skeptic in a somewhat reasonable way for five seconds before it is all torn away by the usual plot mechanics of the genre). And then, the mention of astral projection/mental telepathy/bingbingbingbingbangpopcorn happens and it situates itself in the quiet hamlet known as Laughableville.
So if you're down for a creepy hour-long film and a "AWW SHIT NAW" second half, then this is the one for you.
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