Un groupe d'amis part dans les Highlands écossais à la recherche d'une cabane perdue depuis longtemps. Une fois loin de la civilisation, une tragédie imprévue s'abat sur le groupe et une mau... Tout lireUn groupe d'amis part dans les Highlands écossais à la recherche d'une cabane perdue depuis longtemps. Une fois loin de la civilisation, une tragédie imprévue s'abat sur le groupe et une mauvaise décision mène à la suspicion.Un groupe d'amis part dans les Highlands écossais à la recherche d'une cabane perdue depuis longtemps. Une fois loin de la civilisation, une tragédie imprévue s'abat sur le groupe et une mauvaise décision mène à la suspicion.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 2 victoires au total
Avis à la une
This film has potential but is held short of the finish line by its middling plot and flimsy dialogue. However, the movie is visually stunning with beautiful sweeping shots of the Scottish wilderness and some very appealing shots in various scenes, the cinematography is worth a nod. Mercy Falls relies on the trope characters upon which the genre was built. And the cast work wonders to make these cliche characters work and feel believable and likable in the face of some truly poor writing. Some characters come over better than others - eg lead Lauren Lyle's performance as uninteresting protagonist, Rhona, comes over unenthusiastic aside from key moments- but overall the cast should be proud of being the highlight of the film. Layla Kirk and Nicolette McKeown are particular stand outs. Kirk brings convincing life and (more importantly) enjoyability to an otherwise lazy trope character, Heather. McKeown steers the ship as a solid antagonist, her character, Carla's story has such great potential but is underutilised by the writer(s) in favor of something much less gripping or compelling. But nonetheless she digs deep for the movie's strongest feature and her charisma will almost have you rooting for Carla to succeed in her hunt.
Normally, this wouldn't be the type of film genre I would be interested in seeing and yet in spite of the familiar tropes often found in these horror/suspense movies (including this one), I found Mercy Falls surprisingly engaging. Though I found much of the dialogue to feel very "written", with those certain brands of cadences that you only find in movies such as this and not reflective in how people talk in real life. I also felt that the swearing came across as forced and unnatural at times and as often found in these types of low-budget affairs, I could have done without the obligatory pointless sex scenes. In spite of all this, I found the general premise of escaping from a killer and overcoming said obstacles to be fairly engaging. I also found the establishing shots to be surprisingly well put together for a low-budget film of this calibre. There were times were it felt like to movie was trying put across moments of symbolism, without really giving much thought into what the filmmakers intended, Though most of the performances of the principal cast were at best serviceable, I found the best performance came from Nicolette McKeown, who provided some great moments of drive and intensity in the role of Carla. I hope to see more of McKeown's work in future screen roles to come. So overall, if this is the sort of genre that would interest you and in spite of its budgetary, story and character limitations, I would recommend checking out Mercy Falls. Mostly on the strength of Nicolette McKeown's performance as the antagonist and some well produced establishing shots and moments of atmosphere. Otherwise, I would say either rent this or wait until comes out on a streaming service.
The movie starts off with a sniff of a forest survival horror movie which there are quite a few out there these days.
They can go well and still be cheaply done but this one was good until you see the war scenes which looked so cheap and nasty that it looked as if they were taken from another movie and put into this one.
Then you get the 'yes let's have a stranger hiking with us and we know nothing about her', okay why do script writers treat their audience as if they are thick?
This would never happen in real life, come on stop treating your audience like they are thick.
Other than that the movie had some good scenes in it and the acting wasn't bad.
I am giving it a four and that was a struggle.
They can go well and still be cheaply done but this one was good until you see the war scenes which looked so cheap and nasty that it looked as if they were taken from another movie and put into this one.
Then you get the 'yes let's have a stranger hiking with us and we know nothing about her', okay why do script writers treat their audience as if they are thick?
This would never happen in real life, come on stop treating your audience like they are thick.
Other than that the movie had some good scenes in it and the acting wasn't bad.
I am giving it a four and that was a struggle.
Every cliche you can imagine is present in this tired, derivative waste of time. There isn't much to recommend in this uninspired low budget pablum.
The story isn't terrible but you've seen it all countless times before.
The acting is amateurish in the extreme. You can't present something to an audience with this poor level of acting and expect to be taken seriously. If you are trying to create tension or chills you need better actors. There are no two ways about it.
The film isn't exciting, scary or suspenseful. It is a cheap not very cheerful filler.
In all conscience I can't recommend this.
The story isn't terrible but you've seen it all countless times before.
The acting is amateurish in the extreme. You can't present something to an audience with this poor level of acting and expect to be taken seriously. If you are trying to create tension or chills you need better actors. There are no two ways about it.
The film isn't exciting, scary or suspenseful. It is a cheap not very cheerful filler.
In all conscience I can't recommend this.
Anyone remember the BBC "Merlin" series with Colin Morgan? Well, this is really just like an updated version of one of his adventures, only without the costumes, charm or dragons! We start with some lovely drone footage of the treetops before being introduced to "Rhona" (Lauren Lyle) who has assembled four of her friends to hike twenty-odd miles into the wilderness to find a remote cabin that she has inherited from her long-time estranged father. They haven't a clue, but luckily "Carla" (Nicolette McKeown - who reminded me a lot of Rebecca Ferguson) is on hand and she offers to guide them on their quest. It turns out, though, that "Carla" has quite a psychologically malevolent streak and that "Rhona" and her mates are all rather fickle, shallow types - except, perhaps, "Scott" (James Watterson). What now ensues gets gradually more silly as we discover there is precious little that's likeable about any of these people before a denouement that says very little about the standard of high-end British military training. The audio work is effective, but the rest of this is unremarkable fayre that will keep until it's on the television around Halloween.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe cave at the end of the film has been on screen before in Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
- GaffesA newspaper report refers to "former British Army officer, Sergeant Brewster". Sergeant is an NCO (Non-Commissioned Officer) rank, not an 'officer' rank.
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- How long is Mercy Falls?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 7 124 $US
- Durée1 heure 43 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39:1
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