Rent The Curse (2016)

2.0 of 5 from 3 ratings
1h 19min
Rent The Curse (aka Foe) Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Boston professor Johan Meyer, an eminent anthropologist is highly regarded for his translations of Egyptian tablets. Approached to evaluate an ancient text, his mysterious client requires urgency so Johan works around the clock. As the hours pass, strange occurrences take place as Johan's dreams become drenched in bizarre visions. It all seems a strange coincidence until the translation is almost at an end. It is only then that Johan realizes the parchment contains a ritual that brings to life the Queen of the Underworld, thus awakening the dead and plunging the world into eternal darkness.
Actors:
, , , , , , José Luis Barquero, Anna Andres, , , Valentina Perella
Directors:
Producers:
Loris Curci, Antoni Solé
Writers:
Antoni Solé
Aka:
Foe
Studio:
High Fliers Films
Genres:
Horror, Thrillers
BBFC:
Release Date:
21/03/2016
Run Time:
79 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 2.0, English Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:
None
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Widescreen 1.78:1 / 16:9
Colour:
Colour

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Reviews (1) of The Curse

Unresolved (spoilers follow). - The Curse review by NP

Spoiler Alert
09/04/2020

You know in some films involving a curse such as the one featured here, and the airing of some ancient text sets free some sort of deadly creature from the dawn of time? ‘The Curse’, or ‘Foe’ as it is sometimes known, fills the vast majority of the running time with piecing together the text. As a fan of slow-burning films, even I found myself getting exasperated with the endless scenes of research and bickering in the pursuit of making sense of this alleged curse. Just as it seems hero Johann (Mark Gantt) is getting somewhere, the sequence turns out to be a dream, or troublesome Agent Mike Fox (Timothy Gibbs) pops in and tells Johann exactly what the audience already know.

The acting is very good, the locations are scenic and well used, but the story seems to deliberately avoid going anywhere. This is a shame - Antoni Solé’s plot is hardly there at all.

Fox’s involvement gives us reason to suspect he is pivotal character, and yet he is killed arbitrarily off camera, and a fairly important phone conversation between Johann and his wife Barbara (Nikol Kollars) occurs with us only hearing Johann’s dialogue – at first I thought these two occurrences were two clever red herrings of some kind, but no. Alongside many other moments, they just ‘happened’. Very inconclusive. It’s as if actors Kollars and Gibbs suddenly became unavailable for some reason and were unable to finish the film.

When the end of ’Foe’ came, it happened with no sense of closure or deliberation: the finale was just another scene that made no real sense. This is disappointing because so much seems to have been invested in this. My score is 4 out of 10.

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