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The Chillout Room
The film thread
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<blockquote data-quote="blytherandy159" data-source="post: 838850" data-attributes="member: 18235"><p>[ATTACH]32258[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>Good, unsettling horror flick about Julia and Sara, two sisters both suffering from a degenerative eye disease which has left Sara blind, and Julia soon to follow. When Sara is found hanged in her basement, Julia begins her own investigation, rejecting the possibility of suicide. As she gets closer and closer to the truth, her eyesight worsens, and the film goes from being dark and spooky to truly nerve-wrecking. Comparisons to The Orphanage are inevitable - both films were produced by Guillermo del Toro, both star Belén Rueda (playing both Julia and her sister Sara), and both spin hopelessly to a heartbreaking, depressing conclusion. The Orphanage is likely the better film, but I liked Julia's Eyes. It mostly avoids the tropes of the horror genre and feels fresh - you never completely certain who's face you're about to see when "the invisible man" dips into frame late in the film. Recommended.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="blytherandy159, post: 838850, member: 18235"] [ATTACH=CONFIG]32258._xfImport[/ATTACH] Good, unsettling horror flick about Julia and Sara, two sisters both suffering from a degenerative eye disease which has left Sara blind, and Julia soon to follow. When Sara is found hanged in her basement, Julia begins her own investigation, rejecting the possibility of suicide. As she gets closer and closer to the truth, her eyesight worsens, and the film goes from being dark and spooky to truly nerve-wrecking. Comparisons to The Orphanage are inevitable - both films were produced by Guillermo del Toro, both star Belén Rueda (playing both Julia and her sister Sara), and both spin hopelessly to a heartbreaking, depressing conclusion. The Orphanage is likely the better film, but I liked Julia's Eyes. It mostly avoids the tropes of the horror genre and feels fresh - you never completely certain who's face you're about to see when "the invisible man" dips into frame late in the film. Recommended. [/QUOTE]
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