See No Evil (Blu-ray) R
This summer. Evil gets raw.
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Run Time: 1 hours, 24 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: August 11, 2009
- Originally Released: 2006
- Label: Lions Gate
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Tiffany Lamb, Penny McNamee, Glenn "Kane" Jacobs & Craig Horner | |
Performer: | Samantha Noble, Michael J. Pagan, Luke Pegler, Cecily Polson, Rachel Taylor, Christina Vidal & Steven Vidler | |
Directed by | Gregory Dark | |
Edited by | Scott Richter | |
Screenwriting by | Dan Madigan | |
Composition by | Tyler Bates | |
Director of Photography: | Ben Nott |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 2/4 --
...slightly more effective than your average not-screened-for-critics genre entry...
Full Review
Reel Film Reviews
Rating: 3/5 --
O roteiro não traz uma única idéia original, sendo previsível do início ao fim (com exceção, talvez no que diz respeito ao destino de alguns personagens). Ainda assim, o filme funciona graças à direção firme do ex-realizador pornô (!) Gregory Dark.
Cinema em Cena
Rating: 3/5 --
Gore fans won't be disappointed.
Full Review
Hollywood.com
The dull and tedious splatter-fest See No Evil is, sadly, not even half as intriguing as its skuzzy pedigree.
Full Review
Baltimore City Paper
Rating: 2/4 --
See No Evil is proficient junk, which makes it something of an improvement over recent horrors like An American Haunting.
Full Review
Boston Globe
The gilt-and-grime setting is eerily atmospheric, and screenwriter Dan Madigan has a nicely sick sense of humor.
Full Review
Chicago Reader
Rating: D- --
Comes coated in several layers of sleaze and grime...
Full Review
AV Club
Product Description:
Former porn director Gregory Dark's contemporary B-movie gorefest has all the necessary trappings to leave genre fans satisfied, and others slightly nauseous. The scene is set when a group of juvenile delinquents arrive at a roach-infested ruin of a hotel, where they have agreed to work in exchange for lighter sentences. They are led by a cop who lost his hand four years ago in a struggle with a brutal serial killer whom he killed with a bullet to the head--or so he thought. Now, the very same hulking monster, played by WWE wrestler Kane, haunts the halls of the dilapidated hotel, and with no further adieu begins picking off the teenagers one by one. He metes out his own brand of justice: having been taught as a child by his punishingly Christian mother that the eyes--the windows to the soul--must be cleaned to please God, he gouges out the eyes of each of his victims. The camera does not shy away from this or any other terifically squirm-inducing action, while the hyperkinetic editing maintains a head-spinning pace. The characters remain one-dimensional and stereotypical, true to teen slasher tradition, but there are enough twists and gleeful scares to make it well worth the while.