Presents together six horror stories from Black directors and screenwriters in a single film: "Daddy," "Bride Before You," "Brand of Evil," "The Lake," "Sundown" and "Fugue State".Presents together six horror stories from Black directors and screenwriters in a single film: "Daddy," "Bride Before You," "Brand of Evil," "The Lake," "Sundown" and "Fugue State".Presents together six horror stories from Black directors and screenwriters in a single film: "Daddy," "Bride Before You," "Brand of Evil," "The Lake," "Sundown" and "Fugue State".
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The gist of "Horror Noire" is to have brief horror stories wherein African-Americans are the protagonists as opposed to side characters who immediately get killed off. Too bad the movie doesn't amount to much. Only the second segment is interesting.
There was one thing that I noticed, and I wonder if it's just for the movie. The segment about the dad featured a scene where the dad was teaching a high school class focusing on Isaac Bashevis Singer's "Enemies: A Love Story". A girl says that it features a survivor of the Nazis' atrocities on a ship sailing to the US and battling a demon. I've only seen Paul Mazursky's big-screen adaptation of that novel, so I don't know the original story. However, Wikipedia's description of the novel doesn't mention a demon, although of course it could've been condensed. Maybe the idea behind that scene here was that the girl didn't read the whole novel and it was just a way to set up that segment. Either way, that is not what the novel or the movie adaptation are really about.
Anyway, a pretty weak movie.
There was one thing that I noticed, and I wonder if it's just for the movie. The segment about the dad featured a scene where the dad was teaching a high school class focusing on Isaac Bashevis Singer's "Enemies: A Love Story". A girl says that it features a survivor of the Nazis' atrocities on a ship sailing to the US and battling a demon. I've only seen Paul Mazursky's big-screen adaptation of that novel, so I don't know the original story. However, Wikipedia's description of the novel doesn't mention a demon, although of course it could've been condensed. Maybe the idea behind that scene here was that the girl didn't read the whole novel and it was just a way to set up that segment. Either way, that is not what the novel or the movie adaptation are really about.
Anyway, a pretty weak movie.
I see some people were disappointed with this film. I personally, am glad to see something fresh from Hollywood. New stories are always welcome. I'm sick of Hollywood remaking everything and tossing in all that CGI. I appreciate that the stories were based on the black experience as opposed to just having a few black characters with no depth, that only serve as cannon fodder.
Thought all were well made and strong acting. Agree with other that some of them could have been fleshed out. I liked Sundown and Daddy. Though Daddy could have been longer, kid and dad were great and scary. I'd like to see a sequel as the concept is clever.
I was hopeful after the first minute, it seemed like this had a decent budget and filmed well, then the dialogue started unfortunately. The writing is terrible, the stories lack imagination, and overall silly and boring. Since this is supposed to be a showcase for black horror given the title it amazes me the writer ignored hundreds of years of powerful folklore in black history, many of which would offer excellent stories.
The stories were mediocre, even for an anthology styled film. I think many of the actors could do so much more given better scripts. I hope to see more of them. I've been a fan of Lenora Crichlow since she starred in Being Human (British series). Ditch the writers, keep the cast.
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Details
- Runtime
- 2h 32m(152 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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