Perdido en un bosque hostil, el marqués d'Urfé, noble emisario del rey de Francia, encuentra refugio en casa de una extraña familia.Perdido en un bosque hostil, el marqués d'Urfé, noble emisario del rey de Francia, encuentra refugio en casa de una extraña familia.Perdido en un bosque hostil, el marqués d'Urfé, noble emisario del rey de Francia, encuentra refugio en casa de una extraña familia.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 1 premio ganado y 3 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
The movie is an underrated achievement in these days of digital film making. Filmed in 16mm, and using old school practical effects, it looks wonderful like it came from 60 years ago. The Vourdalak is an amazing creation, a marionette, which gives it a completely otherworldly appearance and way of moving, capable of being both real and supernatural at the same time.
It's not just the way the movie looks that is intriguing but the way it is written, directed and acted as well. It has a very stage play style of writing and acting, everything is a little over dramatic, less trying for realism, and more for drama it might come off as campy to some, if you know where this movies heart is you understand it's not campy.
I don't get the other reviews of it being a comedy, even a black comedy. Perhaps they feel it's being campy with its puppetry and old school ways, and not realizing that it is trying for a style of movie that doesn't exist anymore like Viy, The Old Dark House, and Black Sunday.
From old Russian, Czech, and maybe also Polish scary movies (made roughly some time before the late 80s) that I have seen, the style of the vourdalak's appearance in this film makes me think this was done as an homage.
There's just something about it and the entire film... The closest movie I can think of that this feels similarly creepy to is "Viy", an old Russian movie. (If you've seen that movie and liked it, by the way, then you'll probably like this. If you liked this movie, then you should definitely try to check that one out.)
I might be totally wrong, but this movie felt like it was from another time, maybe also because the creature was real (be it makeup or a puppet, it was a practical effect) and not cgi. (Nothing wrong with digital effects, mind you; I rather love them all.)
The only hint of modernity in this was a jump scare at one point.
Other than that, this movie could have fit right in among the other strange creepy movies in the box set called "All the Haunts Be Ours".
There is nothing comic about the story. In the middle of a forest (Serbian, in the original), a young marquis and ambassador of the King of France (excellent Kacey Mottet Klein) is assaulted and robbed by Turks. The courtier seeks help at the house of a peasant named Gorcha, to continue his journey. But the peasant family and the French diplomat, are all besieged by old Gorcha, who has become a bloodthirsty vurdalak. For his "mise en screen", Beau shot the film in 16 millimeters, which gives a richer and realistic visual quality to the image, in these days when we are accustomed to the pulchritudinous digital image; and in several scenes he resorts to the terror that arises from "the unseen", from what happens in the dark, instead of the explicit images in which the vurdalak subjugates all.
The decision to use a puppet may have been completely intentional, considering that all the characters are indifferent to his cadaverous appearance. Avoiding that "terror a la antique", with figures generated by the most macabre and sinister sector of an author's brain, and reluctant to make it visible with "grace a la CGI", Beau gives another dimension to the macabre, gives it some humor, with a cardboard entity without the fluidity of the computerized image, but which is capable of draining life and startle us, as the shot in which the vurdalak appears behind his little grandson and voraciously bites his neck and consumes his blood.
«The Vourdalak» premiered at the Venice Film Festival, within the framework of Critics' Week, where it won the Jury Prize for Best Female Performance for Ariane Labed (wife of Yorgos Lanthimos and awarded at that same festival for her performance in the drama «Attenberg» by Athina Rachel Tsangari). Currently it must be available on Amazon Prime (which co-produced it). Don't miss it and have your good glass of wine or bag of popcorn ready.
It's just a rilly rilly entertaining hidden gem that will delight veteran horror enthusiasts.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaA fleshed out version of the same Tolstoy short story originally presented in the Boris Karloff anthology movie "Black Sabbath"(1963)
- Citas
Sdenka: [quoting her father, Gorcha] Wait six days for me. If, after those six days, I have not returned, say a prayer in memory of me, for I shall have been killed in battle. But if ever, and may God preserve you, I were to return after six days have passed, I enjoin you to forget that I was your father and to refuse me entry whatever I may say or do - for then I shall be no more than an accursed vourdalak.
- ConexionesReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 966: Terrifier 3 (2024)
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Vourdalak?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Вурдалак
- Locaciones de filmación
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 46,937
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 7,533
- 30 jun 2024
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 78,527
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 30min(90 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1