ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,8/10
5,3 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueKaren boards a late-night train and fights with several other passengers to survive a murderous night after becoming trapped in a tunnel.Karen boards a late-night train and fights with several other passengers to survive a murderous night after becoming trapped in a tunnel.Karen boards a late-night train and fights with several other passengers to survive a murderous night after becoming trapped in a tunnel.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations
Photos
Nina Fillis
- Sarah
- (as Nina M. Fillis)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring the dream at the beginning of the movie, Karen finds an envelope from Viviane with the phrase "Claviceps Purpurea Ergot." Claviceps purpurea is a type of ergot fungus that can grow in rye and has been known to cause hallucinations. An alternate read of the movie is that the demons aren't real, and instead are just hallucinations due to tainted church muffins. The only people who are confirmed to see demons are church members (Betty, Frankie) or people who are shown to have eaten the muffins (Karen).
- ConnexionsReferences Mister Rogers' Neighborhood (1968)
Commentaire en vedette
Prior to "End of the Line," the only thing I'd seen by writer-director Maurice Devereaux was a satirical short on PMS, done in the style of a '50s educational film (look it up on YouTube). Needless to say, this guy is a versatile talent worth keeping an eye on. Like many low-budget, independent horror films, "Line" begins fairly awkward, with wobbly performances, questionable makeup effects, and bizarre camera choreography. But after a deliberate buildup followed by an incredibly chilling segue into cold-blooded violence, "End of the Line" goes off and running to its own rhythm and tune, with near-total disregard for political correctness and moral scrutiny. The plot wouldn't seem so intensely button-pushing if we hadn't been inundated (especially in the wake of 9/11) with a rash of films that failingly attempt to rationalize and justify contemptible actions (on both sides) in the midst of warfare and natural disaster; Devereaux's 'monsters' are members of an expansive (and apparently global) religious sect, led by a Jim Jones type foretelling the impending apocalypse. Armed with crucifix daggers, strong belief, and Sunday Smiles, these zealots are the stuff of nightmares (proving once again what George Romero established in "Night of the Living Dead"--what a zombie does to a person is nothing compared to what the human survivors do to themselves). Beginning on a stopped subway car (where the PA crackles with cryptic, incoherent messages) and progressing through the subterranean tunnels below, a disparate group of survivors attempt to find their way to safety while being stalked by the murderous sect. The location is one of "Line"'s key strengths: the dimly-lit, desolate tunnels provide a thick, claustrophobic sense of desperation and isolation that only ratchets up the terror of the situation. Similarly, the performances by a cast of Stateside unknowns improves considerably as the film progresses, to the point where the viewer aligns his own survival instinct with that of the characters, and the desire to see them make it out alive. But like Romero, Devereaux isn't content with Happy Endings, and leaves us on an admirably ambiguous note that would do Dante Aligheri proud. "End of the Line" is a triumph for the genre.
- Jonny_Numb
- 5 sept. 2009
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- How long is End of the Line?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 200 000 $ (estimation)
- Durée1 heure 35 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
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What is the French language plot outline for Le terminus de l'horreur (2007)?
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