AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
4,4/10
1,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA high school girl gets nightmares and sleepwalks from watching horror movies. Her dad bans them but she's addicted and sneaks out to watch The Wisher. The horror becomes real.A high school girl gets nightmares and sleepwalks from watching horror movies. Her dad bans them but she's addicted and sneaks out to watch The Wisher. The horror becomes real.A high school girl gets nightmares and sleepwalks from watching horror movies. Her dad bans them but she's addicted and sneaks out to watch The Wisher. The horror becomes real.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
Rob van Meenen
- Jimmy Winters
- (as Rob Van Meenan)
Avaliações em destaque
Hi, well i was in this movie, you might notice me as the texas teen killer, and also the nevada killer ( or whatever the hell the other guy was ) and I also was the set dresser for this film. I hate it, it blows. Rent this flick only to laugh at it and marvel at the incompetance of Gavin Wilding. This movie suck a lot, a whole lot.
I recognize fully well that the writing and special effects of the movie within a movie are intended to be ham-handed and over the top. The thing is, this feature itself isn't too far removed from those same vibes. The plot initially impresses as purely an invention of movie magic, with no explanation given for why "the wisher" should latch onto protagonist Mary - and once the truth is revealed, it feels like it falls somewhere between Standard Slasher and Lifetime Original Movie. The characters and large swaths of the dialogue are customary, often juvenile High School pablum. I can forgive recognizable ideas borrowed from other stories, but beyond that, even as it throws a number of ideas at us - some of them very good! - it's a little familiar and predictable. Meanwhile, the dialogue, music, characters, direction, and overall tone all date very distinctly to the late 90s/early 2000s. Even smaller inclusions somewhat bewilder - why does the school counselor have a lava lamp in his office? Why does the school have a slushie machine that freely available to students? Why does the counselor meet with Mary in the school gym instead of his office? This is to say nothing of the attempts by the filmmakers to jump onto the bandwagon and emphasize the Internet as much as they can at a time when the web was first truly beginning to flourish as a cultural staple.
I don't think 'Spliced,' also known as 'The wisher,' is altogether bad, but this also doesn't make it easy to earnestly engage with. The blood, gore, and stunts and effects look great. I like the costume design for "the wisher," and in a more general sense I appreciate the hair and makeup work. I'd love to see the cast in other films, as I trust they'd prove themselves, though here it really seems like they're forced into a corner, whether by Ellen Cook's screenplay, Gavin Wilding's direction, or both. Suitable narrative ideas are at first thrown out somewhat haphazardly; I acknowledge that this may have been intentional, feeding the audience multiple concepts so as to throw us off from what the precise course of events may be - but it's still off-putting. When those ideas do come together, it's not entirely convincing, and the plot itself seems unfocused at times. The scene writing ably conveys tension and suspense more than not, but some moments altogether raise a skeptical eyebrow, definitely including the specific use here of a computer at the climax.
Ultimately I think this is passably enjoyable, but I hardly feel like I can give any particular recommendation. It's modestly fun if you stumble onto it, and utmost fans of the cast or of slashers as a genre will get the most out of it. Even at that, one should keep their expectations in check, for 'Spliced' is certainly not without its problems. Save this for a lazy day and have a good time, but just remember that there's plenty of other movies much more deserving of 90 minutes of your attention.
I don't think 'Spliced,' also known as 'The wisher,' is altogether bad, but this also doesn't make it easy to earnestly engage with. The blood, gore, and stunts and effects look great. I like the costume design for "the wisher," and in a more general sense I appreciate the hair and makeup work. I'd love to see the cast in other films, as I trust they'd prove themselves, though here it really seems like they're forced into a corner, whether by Ellen Cook's screenplay, Gavin Wilding's direction, or both. Suitable narrative ideas are at first thrown out somewhat haphazardly; I acknowledge that this may have been intentional, feeding the audience multiple concepts so as to throw us off from what the precise course of events may be - but it's still off-putting. When those ideas do come together, it's not entirely convincing, and the plot itself seems unfocused at times. The scene writing ably conveys tension and suspense more than not, but some moments altogether raise a skeptical eyebrow, definitely including the specific use here of a computer at the climax.
Ultimately I think this is passably enjoyable, but I hardly feel like I can give any particular recommendation. It's modestly fun if you stumble onto it, and utmost fans of the cast or of slashers as a genre will get the most out of it. Even at that, one should keep their expectations in check, for 'Spliced' is certainly not without its problems. Save this for a lazy day and have a good time, but just remember that there's plenty of other movies much more deserving of 90 minutes of your attention.
This movie is just so funny. It is totally, totally inept. I had expected a decent movie but after a while I realized that this movie had inept acting, dialougue, plot - everything in it was made to be wrong. However, it is very exciting, filled with details and quite intelligent actually in its own inept way. I just found out that this is the same director who made Christina´s House. This movie is WAAAAYYYYY better than Christina´s House which must be one of the worst horror movies ever (I think it got a rating around 2/10 on IMDB). Anyway, The Wisher is incredibly childish and stupid at times in an intelligent, creative way. How old is the director? 10 years or something. It´s like those horror comic scripts I made when I was that age. Moreover, the first scene, where "the father" (who looks about 5 years older than his daughter - I thought it was her boyfriend) says "What did you wish for" and eats the blood-filled (menstrual?) cake. What did she wish for? We will never know.
ok, i understand many people have talked badly of The Wisher and i have to admit i did see it for Drew Lachey from 98 Degrees and if he wasn't in it i probably would be talking bad of it as well. It was an ok film i guess, some good parts, some of the acting was pretty bad but not totally bad. I would watch it again probably, even if just to see Drew. Maybe if Drew were to join a film with a better script he might get some where with his acting.
High school student Mary is having nightmares and sleepwalking. Since she is falling asleep during the day, a teacher sends her to counselor Campbell. He is most concerned about her sleepwalking, which is dangerous.
Mary says she enjoys being scared. In fact, she compares it to being sexually aroused. Strangely enough, we never actually see this. She seems to react to being scared the way most of us would.
Mary's best friends are Debbie and Kara. She seems perfectly normal with them, though I was expecting a more withdrawn teen like, say, Carrie. A Plain Jane (but still attractive), she wants Brad to be her boyfriend, but he prefers Mandy, who is mean and dresses like a bimbo. Mary's father Jake is overprotective and not particularly sympathetic. Her mother Kelly seems more caring, and she has a younger sister Beth who needs to be shielded from inappropriate material on TV.
The hot movie is called 'The Wisher'. It is so controversial that it is being banned by some communities because of the copycat behavior it inspires. The movie is not very good, but the teens in the theater seem to like it, and the visual effects and violence may be the redeeming quality, if there is one. Mary goes with her friends, but that may not have been such a good idea.
After the movie, Mary keeps seeing the villain from 'The Wisher', or at least someone who looks like him. And tragedies start to happen in her life when she is awake. In the process of investigating just what is going on, Mary is fortunate to be friendly with movie projectionist Shane.
I don't like movies that are too scary, and this one really wasn't most of the time. There were some creepy scenes with appropriate music (or what sounded sort of like music but seemed not of this world). The kids seemed to like alternative rock music of the style that sounds like demons, such as that used with the opening credits. But no one here was really 'goth'.
I liked Mary right away once she went into her first counseling session. I've never heard of Liane Balaban, and most of her movies appear to be Canadian-made and not familiar to Americans. But she did a capable job most of the time and I'd like to see more of her. Mary was actually a very determined character and not at all like I was expecting.
Ron Silver also did a reasonably good job. There wasn't really anything outstanding here, but for the type of movie, I found it entertaining. The town is never named, but a fire truck says 'Regina Fire Dept.', though the community is referred to as 'a small town'.
One weakness (I guess they figure we were lazy, but it could have been more realistic): I've always heard that downloading movies takes a lot of time. Someone in this film downloaded a movie on the Internet and was able to fast-forward through it and watch parts of it in the time it would take most regular web sites to appear. A little extra effort to make it look like real downloading, with some editing and frustration, wouldn't have hurt.
It was okay, but nothing spectacular.
Mary says she enjoys being scared. In fact, she compares it to being sexually aroused. Strangely enough, we never actually see this. She seems to react to being scared the way most of us would.
Mary's best friends are Debbie and Kara. She seems perfectly normal with them, though I was expecting a more withdrawn teen like, say, Carrie. A Plain Jane (but still attractive), she wants Brad to be her boyfriend, but he prefers Mandy, who is mean and dresses like a bimbo. Mary's father Jake is overprotective and not particularly sympathetic. Her mother Kelly seems more caring, and she has a younger sister Beth who needs to be shielded from inappropriate material on TV.
The hot movie is called 'The Wisher'. It is so controversial that it is being banned by some communities because of the copycat behavior it inspires. The movie is not very good, but the teens in the theater seem to like it, and the visual effects and violence may be the redeeming quality, if there is one. Mary goes with her friends, but that may not have been such a good idea.
After the movie, Mary keeps seeing the villain from 'The Wisher', or at least someone who looks like him. And tragedies start to happen in her life when she is awake. In the process of investigating just what is going on, Mary is fortunate to be friendly with movie projectionist Shane.
I don't like movies that are too scary, and this one really wasn't most of the time. There were some creepy scenes with appropriate music (or what sounded sort of like music but seemed not of this world). The kids seemed to like alternative rock music of the style that sounds like demons, such as that used with the opening credits. But no one here was really 'goth'.
I liked Mary right away once she went into her first counseling session. I've never heard of Liane Balaban, and most of her movies appear to be Canadian-made and not familiar to Americans. But she did a capable job most of the time and I'd like to see more of her. Mary was actually a very determined character and not at all like I was expecting.
Ron Silver also did a reasonably good job. There wasn't really anything outstanding here, but for the type of movie, I found it entertaining. The town is never named, but a fire truck says 'Regina Fire Dept.', though the community is referred to as 'a small town'.
One weakness (I guess they figure we were lazy, but it could have been more realistic): I've always heard that downloading movies takes a lot of time. Someone in this film downloaded a movie on the Internet and was able to fast-forward through it and watch parts of it in the time it would take most regular web sites to appear. A little extra effort to make it look like real downloading, with some editing and frustration, wouldn't have hurt.
It was okay, but nothing spectacular.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAmong Mary's horror movie videotapes, there's a DVD of A Casa da Morte (2000), Gavin Wilding's previous feature.
- Erros de gravaçãoSPIOLER : After Brad gets attacked by The Wisher he has several large cuts on the left side of his face. But days later, he doesn't have any stitches or scars on his face.
- ConexõesReferences A Hora do Pesadelo (1984)
- Trilhas sonorasBug
Performed by Out of Your Mouth (as Flu)
Written by Jason Darr
[opening sequence theme]
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- How long is The Wisher?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 15.369
- Tempo de duração1 hora 27 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was O Senhor dos Sonhos (2002) officially released in Canada in English?
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