Incident in a Ghostland

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Following her aunt's death, Colleen and her daughters inherit her house. However, during their first night in their new home, murderers enter the home, putting Colleen in a situation where she must fight to save her daughters' lives. When the girls suffer a terrible trauma during the night, their disparate personalities diverge even further. The eldest daughter, Beth, is said to become a famous horror author with a perfect family and life in Los Angeles, while her sister, Vera, cannot cope and loses her mind faced to an unshakable sense of paranoia. Sixteen years later the daughters and mother reunite at the house where Colleen and Vera continue to reside. It is then that strange events begin to take place. (Universal Sony Pictures Home Entertainment)

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Reviews (4)

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POMO 

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English Incident in a Ghostland is an intense freak house nightmare. Laugier is not good with sadness and other deeper human emotions, and probably will never be, but at least he managed to combine his trademark ultra-violence and horrifying gore with the blending of dreams and reality, from which one can escape into the liberating world of imagination. It does not always make sense, but in the end it is an impressive puzzle in which (thankfully) the worst imaginable traumas of the past find release. Together with the stressed viewer. Seeing this in the morning as the first of five movies of the same genre was quite a hardcore wake-up call. [Sitges FF] ()

J*A*S*M 

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English Excellent narrative pirouette and a really intense madhouse! I trusted Laugier, but since the film wasn’t preceded by the hype of a big horror event (like this year’s A Quiet Place or the upcoming Hereditary), I was expecting less. And maybe thanks to that I ended up pleasantly surprised. Ghostland lacks the philosophical layers of Martyrs, which established Laugier, but it certainly delivers more horror satisfaction than The Tall Man. A decade ago we were used to this breed of films, but they stepped into the background in such way that today they can feel like a breath of fresh air again. Finally a horror action film that is unleashed and hurts! The action puts the character through such things that you believe that they are deeply traumatising them, and their hysteria doesn’t surprise you. All this, moreover, wrapped in first-class technical form, taking place in the interiors of a magnificent horror cabin, and made special by a narrative structure that makes sense (though I can imagine that it can be self-evident for some). Applause. ()

Malarkey 

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English Pascal Laugier is simply great. At first he catches our attention with the H. P. Lovecraft reference, and then starts such a brutal gore ride that I had to do my best not to shit my pants with fear. In its own way, Ghostland is brilliant. True, it contains a lot of self—serving violence and is in its core very simple, but it also has a certain style and works surprisingly well despite the mentioned flaws. A raw hard-core horror where I didn’t mind the simple premise, an occasional overcontrivedness and logical lapses at moments where reality blends with dreams, but I enjoyed all of it as part of the movie. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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English Pascal Laugier, the director of Martyrs, is on a rampage again this year! After a long hiatus, the French are waking up and a new French Wave may be starting! This year they surprised with the stylish Revenge and now they are rocking with Ghostland, so thumbs up. Ghostland is an unpleasant, evil, psychological emotional nightmare that simmers for almost the entire film. Not much can be written about the story without spoilers, but it's important to mention that the film can seem confusing at times and you need to use your brain. The beautiful Crystal Reed excels in the lead role, I have grown to love her in the series Gotham, so all her agony made me sympathize with her far more than I should have. A big plus are the deranged bad guys, especially the giant hulk who reminded me of the wrestler Glenn Jacobs, who starred in See no Evil and made me feel really uncomfortable. Another big plus is the setting of the old house, with its creepy dolls as decoration, which creates a great horror atmosphere. The action, the chases, the screaming, the violence, the physical and psychological terror throughout the film makes Ghostland a very intense spectacle that will be at least in the top 3 this year. If Pascal had gone a bit further with the gore, it would be a clear number one for me. Still, an excellent experience. After the second screening I'm upping it to a full score. The experience is more intense. 85%. ()