‘Silent House,’ reviewed by Marshall Fine

HollywoodandFine.com

“Silent House” is one of those gimmick-movies that you can easily imagine beginning with a conversation along the lines of, “Hey, you know what would be cool?”

In this case, the answer to that question is, “It would be cool to make a horror movie in one continuous unedited shot that lasts the length of the whole movie so the whole thing unfolds in real time.”

That was the approach with the Uruguayan original of this film by Gustavo Hernandez – and filmmakers Laura Lau and Chris Kentis, the filmmakers behind “Open Water,” follow the same template in their new American remake. (In fact, you can see the seams where they did, in fact, cut, putting together long, long takes but not one unbroken one.)

Like the original, the Lau-Kentis film focuses on a trio of people who converge on a remote lake house: a man, John (Adam Trese); his daughter, Sarah (Elizabeth Olsen); and the man’s brother, Peter (Eric Sheffer Stevens). The man and his brother have been working on remodeling the house in preparation for moving out; the daughter has joined them for the final night before they take off in the morning.

Peter and John fight about John’s expectations of the work Peter should have finished, so Peter leaves. John heads off to work elsewhere in the house – leaving Sarah to wander around outside. She runs into a young woman she knew when they were both children, though Sarah doesn’t really remember her. When Sarah goes back into the house, she can’t find John – and she hears weird noises from upstairs. She locates her father and they take their flashlights to explore the upstairs.

Oh – did I mention that the electricity is out in the house and it’s all boarded up against vandals?

This review continues on my website.

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