Elevator Game
- 2023
- 1h 34m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
4,1/10
4,9 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSupernatural horror, based on the eponymous online phenomenon, a ritual conducted in an elevator, in which players attempt to travel to another dimension using a set of rules that can be fou... Tout lireSupernatural horror, based on the eponymous online phenomenon, a ritual conducted in an elevator, in which players attempt to travel to another dimension using a set of rules that can be found online.Supernatural horror, based on the eponymous online phenomenon, a ritual conducted in an elevator, in which players attempt to travel to another dimension using a set of rules that can be found online.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
Gino F. Anania
- Ryan Keaton
- (as Gino Anania)
Avis en vedette
From the jump you can tell this is going to be your quintessential, un-self-aware indie horror with questionable acting, script and plot.
For the first 45 minutes it is exactly that, but in an unoffending way. You have your expected token characters with their quippy banter that isn't as clever as they think it is and some community theater like acting... and it's fine for the most part. It then hits a climax scene and it is... jarring to say the least. I don't know why literally anyone on set didn't tell the actor playing Kris that he was not in an off broadway production of The Shining, but I was literally sitting on my couch actively cringing throughout that entire scene... and honestly at that point I blame direction. From then on it pretty steadily goes down hill. I would say it was riddled with plot holes but Swiss cheese is just made that way so we will let it go...
On a positive note, I will say when the creep factor hit, it was pretty solid at times. A lot of the kills and the gore were pretty cool and I was surprisingly impressed with the sfx/cgi. I will say however, the makeup for the ghost/demon was unsuccessful and was serving up Party City body paint unfortunately. The movie also looked quite nice in general. Good picture quality and solid shots/editing. As far as acting went, the folks who played Chloe and Matty had some potential, but everything just felt so stilted and unintentionally campy that there wasn't much room for success regardless. It felt like maybe this was a first go around for the majority of the cast and in the least patronizing way possible, everything is a learning experience and not everything is always going to be your best work and that's okay.
At large, while still retaining some positive attributes, this movie didn't hit the way they wanted it to. I wouldn't say it was unsuccessful per se, but there were many variables that added up to a very amateurish fruition. I think that the cast and crew should still be proud of what they accomplished but as far as recommendation goes, I would probably have to say to pass on this one.
For the first 45 minutes it is exactly that, but in an unoffending way. You have your expected token characters with their quippy banter that isn't as clever as they think it is and some community theater like acting... and it's fine for the most part. It then hits a climax scene and it is... jarring to say the least. I don't know why literally anyone on set didn't tell the actor playing Kris that he was not in an off broadway production of The Shining, but I was literally sitting on my couch actively cringing throughout that entire scene... and honestly at that point I blame direction. From then on it pretty steadily goes down hill. I would say it was riddled with plot holes but Swiss cheese is just made that way so we will let it go...
On a positive note, I will say when the creep factor hit, it was pretty solid at times. A lot of the kills and the gore were pretty cool and I was surprisingly impressed with the sfx/cgi. I will say however, the makeup for the ghost/demon was unsuccessful and was serving up Party City body paint unfortunately. The movie also looked quite nice in general. Good picture quality and solid shots/editing. As far as acting went, the folks who played Chloe and Matty had some potential, but everything just felt so stilted and unintentionally campy that there wasn't much room for success regardless. It felt like maybe this was a first go around for the majority of the cast and in the least patronizing way possible, everything is a learning experience and not everything is always going to be your best work and that's okay.
At large, while still retaining some positive attributes, this movie didn't hit the way they wanted it to. I wouldn't say it was unsuccessful per se, but there were many variables that added up to a very amateurish fruition. I think that the cast and crew should still be proud of what they accomplished but as far as recommendation goes, I would probably have to say to pass on this one.
Elevator Game is a film whose story is based on an internet creepypasta legend that originated in Japan and South Korea.
The legend states that if you use an elevator to travel to a series of floors, in a specific order...upon reaching the fifth floor...a mysterious woman will enter.
You can neither look at, nor speak to this woman...less she pull you into her realm.
After reaching the fifth floor...you hit the button for the first floor...and if you go up...towards the tenth floor...upon reaching said floor...you open a portal to her realm.
One much like our own, though where there is no electricity...and a red cross can be seen in the sky.
Hence it being called "The Red World" in the film.
To get back...you must go to the same elevator, and repeat the process...though...upon heading toward the tenth floor, you must interrupt the process by hitting a button for a floor between the one you are on, and the tenth floor.
This should, in theory, return you to your own dimension.
If the process is interrupted by someone else entering the elevator, prior to reaching the tenth floor...you must immediately return to the first floor...and not look back.
Such are the rules of The Elevator Game.
For the most part, the film remains true to these rules.
However they take some artistic liberties of their own.
By having the "Fifth Floor Woman" rip you apart if you break the rules, for example.
Going into this, I fully expected it to be stupid.
And it is.
But I actually kind of enjoyed it.
It's definitely the type of horror that is tailored towards adolescents, and the youtube generation.
I think, ideally, it would have worked better as a short film.
But, for what it is...it actually kind of works.
Which is substantially more than I expected from it.
So colour me pleasantly surprised.
4 out of 10.
The legend states that if you use an elevator to travel to a series of floors, in a specific order...upon reaching the fifth floor...a mysterious woman will enter.
You can neither look at, nor speak to this woman...less she pull you into her realm.
After reaching the fifth floor...you hit the button for the first floor...and if you go up...towards the tenth floor...upon reaching said floor...you open a portal to her realm.
One much like our own, though where there is no electricity...and a red cross can be seen in the sky.
Hence it being called "The Red World" in the film.
To get back...you must go to the same elevator, and repeat the process...though...upon heading toward the tenth floor, you must interrupt the process by hitting a button for a floor between the one you are on, and the tenth floor.
This should, in theory, return you to your own dimension.
If the process is interrupted by someone else entering the elevator, prior to reaching the tenth floor...you must immediately return to the first floor...and not look back.
Such are the rules of The Elevator Game.
For the most part, the film remains true to these rules.
However they take some artistic liberties of their own.
By having the "Fifth Floor Woman" rip you apart if you break the rules, for example.
Going into this, I fully expected it to be stupid.
And it is.
But I actually kind of enjoyed it.
It's definitely the type of horror that is tailored towards adolescents, and the youtube generation.
I think, ideally, it would have worked better as a short film.
But, for what it is...it actually kind of works.
Which is substantially more than I expected from it.
So colour me pleasantly surprised.
4 out of 10.
Again with this tacky social media challenge/investigator horror movie formula. Shudder wiffed on this one. The setup in the first few minutes was probably the best part, and that's not saying much. The next 30-45 minutes of a bunch of social media hucksters banter back and forth is quite dull. I was not interested in anything they had to say, and no interest watching them stumble through their pitiful plight on their devices. Sometime after that we get a frightening scene, more pointless dialogue, and then we get to watch someone sift through web pages for a while.. and then I think I dozed off. I gave it a star for some ok-but-sparse tense scenes, but I couldnt come up with anything else worth mentioning. Bottom of the barrel stuff for Shudder flicks.
So I was born in the early 80s and, as a result, I grew up in a time when video rentals were a thing. Back then, if you rented a horror movie, it could fall into one of three categories: Big-budget film that had had a major cinema release, small-budget indie that was made by creative people with limited resources, or small-budget cash grab, made by people who just viewed making films as a way to make some money, with no real creativity or imagination involved; make the box look interesting and someone will pay to watch it.
Movies are distributed differently nowadays but, had it been released back then, The Elevator Game would fall into the latter category.
The plot is formulaic and unimaginative, locking on to a particular idea that the filmmakers thought was current and popular (It's already out-dated). It tries to incorporate modern tropes, such as YouTube videos and influencers, but does it so ineptly that it just shows how little actual knowledge the people at the helm have of these things, resorting to exaggerated and inaccurate stereotypes.
The characters are all stereotypical horror archetypes with zero depth, and the casting of some characters defies belief (why does the "high-school intern" look older than his colleagues?)
The make-up and effects are about the level you'd expect from a mediocre Halloween party.
The acting is generally poor but, to be fair, I think there is some real talent here. The problem is the capable actors are stifled by awful scripting and direction. I won't single anyone out but there are actors in this film who I really can see - and hope I will see - going on to bigger and better things.
Ultimately, this just felt like an unimaginative, made-to-order movie that was created solely to pad out Shudder's library of original films and earn someone, somewhere a few extra bucks.
Movies are distributed differently nowadays but, had it been released back then, The Elevator Game would fall into the latter category.
The plot is formulaic and unimaginative, locking on to a particular idea that the filmmakers thought was current and popular (It's already out-dated). It tries to incorporate modern tropes, such as YouTube videos and influencers, but does it so ineptly that it just shows how little actual knowledge the people at the helm have of these things, resorting to exaggerated and inaccurate stereotypes.
The characters are all stereotypical horror archetypes with zero depth, and the casting of some characters defies belief (why does the "high-school intern" look older than his colleagues?)
The make-up and effects are about the level you'd expect from a mediocre Halloween party.
The acting is generally poor but, to be fair, I think there is some real talent here. The problem is the capable actors are stifled by awful scripting and direction. I won't single anyone out but there are actors in this film who I really can see - and hope I will see - going on to bigger and better things.
Ultimately, this just felt like an unimaginative, made-to-order movie that was created solely to pad out Shudder's library of original films and earn someone, somewhere a few extra bucks.
What a shower of crap. Just sat through this childish supposed to be, wanna be, horror film and hate myself for doing so.
It's like an episode Goosebumps,only with worse acting and less scares.
With a very low budget and very dislikeable characters,you just end up disliking everything about it.
I sometimes wonder why these films are even made because who in their right minds would enjoy making or watching stuff like this?
So anyway they've taken a game I'm sure everyone's heard about and actually had a chance to make something that could have been at least watchable. However they failed badly, buy just making a teen type cringefest.
If I were you I'd avoid this like the plague.
It's like an episode Goosebumps,only with worse acting and less scares.
With a very low budget and very dislikeable characters,you just end up disliking everything about it.
I sometimes wonder why these films are even made because who in their right minds would enjoy making or watching stuff like this?
So anyway they've taken a game I'm sure everyone's heard about and actually had a chance to make something that could have been at least watchable. However they failed badly, buy just making a teen type cringefest.
If I were you I'd avoid this like the plague.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesUsed as the main topic in season 2 of 'Evil' on CBS, "E is for Elevator", pressing elevator buttons in a specific manner can open a direct passage to Hell.
- Citations
Matty Davis: You don't call 911 on a ghost!
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- How long is Elevator Game?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 370 179 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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