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‘When Evil Lurks’ Gets a 99% Critical Rating, Audience Gives it 57%

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Lurks

When Evil Lurks is currently streaming on Shudder, and it seems critics are loving it more than audiences. It currently sits at a Fresh 99% Tomatometer critical rating, but the audience score is literally rotten, coming in at just 57%.

One amateur critic named Haley W gave it two stars and said: “There were a lot of terrifying moments, but as someone who cares a lot about endings, this movie just did not do it for me. Characters just refusing to listen to people who clearly know more than them just got incredibly frustrating, and overall the character decisions just didn’t make a lot of sense even when considering their situations. I really can’t understand why the critics love it.”

Another “verified” audience critic named Don’t Go gave it one star, saying, “I felt like it was all over the place.”

When Evil Lurks

On the other hand, professional critics aren’t being “rotten” and loving the bloody unpredictability of it all.

John Serba of Decider says, “‘When Evil Lurks‘ is inspired and immersive, thoughtfully composed visually, and, most importantly, crazy as hell.”

Even “family-friendly” site Common Sense Media’s critic, Jeffrey M. Anderson, lauded the film, “Kind of a zombie movie and kind of a demon-possession movie, though also quite unlike anything you’d expect from those genres, this potent chiller is truly shocking, as well as clever and knowing.”

One thing that might be causing the divide between the audience and the critics is the film’s brutality. Some pretty intense scenes require trigger warnings, but doing so would spoil the movie. Also, the film is in Spanish, and subtitles aren’t for everyone. Phone-scrolling movie watchers at home who don’t speak Spanish might miss plot points through captions, opting for the latest TikTok video instead.

When Evil Lurks is more critically acclaimed than the legacy sequel Exorcist: Believer which falls into the same sub-genre. Believer is at the bottom of the barrel, receiving a 22% Tomatometer Rating among professional critics. More interestingly, the audience score for that movie is 59%, two percentage points higher than When Evil Lurks.

Tell us what you think. Did the professional critics get it right, or did the audience? When Evil Lurks is currently streaming on Shudder.

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Shudder Promises: “Goopy practical effects…and LOTS of blood” in Upcoming Movie

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Shudder has been hitting out of the park with new horror releases lately. Now comes word that they will release the horror/comedy Destroy All Neighbors on their streaming platform starting January 12. The movie is helmed by music video director Josh Forbes. It stars Jonah Ray Rodrigues (Mystery Science Theater 3000), and Alex Winter, Ted, of Bill & Ted Fame.

There is no trailer for the movie yet, but Shudder explains that Rodrigues plays William, “a neurotic, self-absorbed musician determined to finish his prog-rock magnum opus, faces a creative roadblock in the form of a noisy and grotesque neighbor named Vlad (Alex Winter). Finally working up the nerve to demand that Vlad keep it down, William inadvertently decapitates him. But, while attempting to cover up one murder, William’s accidental reign of terror causes victims to pile up and become undead corpses who torment and create more bloody detours on his road to prog-rock Valhalla. Destroy All Neighbors is a twisted splatter-comedy about a deranged journey of self-discovery full of goopy practical FX, a well-known ensemble cast, and LOTS of blood.”

Destroy All Neighbors will premiere on Shudder on January 12.

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‘Darkman’ is Getting a 4K Release Early Next Year

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Not all superheroes come from Marvel or DC, some come from the mind of a horror movie director (who would eventually go on to direct a Marvel movie). Sam Raimi was ahead of his time with 1990’s Darkman, and it’s finally getting a 4K Collector’s Edition release on February 20.

Perhaps this movie started Liam Neeson’s revenge-thriller movie path, Darkman had a stressful post-production period. A film editor had a nervous breakdown and left after Raimi reprimanded him for not following his storyboards. Then, test audiences hated the initial film calling it “the worst movie they had ever seen.”

After some re-tooling and hiring Danny Elfman to do the score, Darkman did a complete 180, becoming a critical and box-office hit. Marvel decided they wanted a piece of the action and developed comic books based on the character soon after.

The Scream Factory 4K edition is available for pre-order now at a cost of $35.99 for the paper sleeve release. The steelbook edition is $47.99. Both are available for pre-order. Sadly no special features have been specified at this writing.

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Director Adam Green Relays a Chilling True Story About the Ski Lift in ‘Frozen’

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Just before director Adam Green announced the DVD release of his festival hit Victor Crowley back in 2018, he gave fans a behind-the-scenes tale about another one of his films; Frozen.

As we approach the 14th anniversary of that movie, we thought we would rewind a bit and re-share what he said about his experience on Frozen; his most successful film to date.

In Frozen a group of friends get stuck on a ski lift high above the ground in the middle of a snowstorm and try to figure out how to get down.

The film is not based on a true story, but there is an eerie coincidence as he tells it attached to the film’s location, and he may have had a premonition while riding the lift before cameras even started rolling.

“[We] finally came over these trees and there it was,” conveys Adam while scouting exteriors 50 feet above the ground. “There was the spot and instead of me saying ‘This is where we should shoot the movie,’ for some reason I said ‘This is where they die,’ and the chair just stopped- stopped! And I thought the representative of the mountain was like f***ing with us or something, but no it stopped.”

Adam says he excused the sudden halt to the wind or something else; it’s no rare occurrence that ski lifts stop without warning, but he says it was still really eerie and what was only a few minutes of hanging there in mid-air, felt like an hour.

Here’s the strange part,  as he was shooting the movie he found out from lift operators that someone had taken their own life with a firearm in that exact same location. They even showed a member of the crew the alleged chair that had the bullet hole in it.

Thinking it was still just a rumor, or a local urban legend Adam did more investigating. It wasn’t until Sundance that Adam got confirmation the death was real.

“Somebody in the audience raised their hand, and…said the person’s name. It was a true story, someone did die there. After that point my editor and I started going through all the footage trying to see if there was another voice on the audio or can you see anything.” They didn’t.

However chilling that story is we’d still love to hear if there was ever a conversation with Disney about using them using the name Frozen for their animated hit which came out three years later.

We sadly assume Disney won’t be doing a princess musical about Victor Cowley anytime soon, so we know that copyright is safe.

Green talks about his ski lift premonition at 11:38 in the video below:

Trailer:

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