The Devil Within

The Devil Within

2016 "The Ultimate Confession."
The Devil Within
The Devil Within

The Devil Within

3.1 | 1h19m | en | Horror

In November 2012 Rachel Kusza and her team of film makers travelled to Transylvania to document the Baciu forest. A forest with a dark history of strange occurrences, ghost sightings and countless cases of missing people. The film crew were never heard from again. After searching for the film crew for two years Howard Redman, Rachels teacher, found the crews camera buried in the snow....

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3.1 | 1h19m | en | Horror , Thriller | More Info
Released: May. 09,2016 | Released Producted By: Lonely Crow Productions , Country: United Kingdom Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: http://lonelycrow.co.uk/the-devil-complex/
Synopsis

In November 2012 Rachel Kusza and her team of film makers travelled to Transylvania to document the Baciu forest. A forest with a dark history of strange occurrences, ghost sightings and countless cases of missing people. The film crew were never heard from again. After searching for the film crew for two years Howard Redman, Rachels teacher, found the crews camera buried in the snow....

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Cast

Maria Simona Arsu , Bill Hutchens , Tom Bonington

Director

Ioana Turcan

Producted By

Lonely Crow Productions ,

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Reviews

akd-974-774081 I'm a big fan of found footage but if you are looking for something with any sort of thrill or excitement or even plot line, this isn't it. I am very forgiving cause I love horror and watch almost everything there is, however I was more invested in a Huffington Post article then I was with this movie. SPOILERS: If you get lost in the forest you might want it to be any season but actual winter cause then being lost would make actual sense. I'm not even sure what one of the characters was there for or the point of him being there was. So if you are looking at more exciting ways to watch paint dry, you've just found it!
Platypuschow The Blair Witch Project (1999) has a lot to answer for. Ever since its release we've been bombarded with found footage movies because of the seeming popularity and because they're insanely cheap to produce.This British made one is set in Romania and revolves around a documentary film crew investigating the infamous Hoia-Baciu Forest. For those unfamiliar this is a forest within Transylvania that is well known for it's stories of ghosts, demons and ufos.The first 3/4 of the movie is character establishment, when something finally happens it still doesn't. Truth be told this is less actual content or activity than Blair Witch, than Pararnomal Activity. By that I mean literally nothing happens.It claims this is based on true events, yet again a lie. The forest is well known for stories, but no basis or evidence to support any of them.One thing I found baffling is that the forest is well known for its central circle and distinct tree growth in some areas. They don't show any of this, why go all the way there and not film the two most impressive things within the forest? Forest, snow and some very unlikeable characters. Thats your lot.The Good: Fantastic setting Based on something real and fairly interesting The Bad: Weird writing decisions Nothing happens Things I Learnt From This Movie: We live in an age where a movie can be released where nothing happens and nothing is explained and people will pay for it (In more ways than one)
FlashCallahan In November 2012 Rachel Kusza and her team of film makers travelled to Transylvania to document the Baciu forest.The film crew were never heard from again. After searching for the film crew for two years, Rachels teacher finds the crews camera buried in the snow.Before taking own life, Redman uploads the footage to the internet.It shows the crews journey into the woods, but it also shows why locals refuse to enter the supposedly haunted forest.......Some found footage movies can be original, if they have writers and film makers who can be bothered with their 'project'.But then you get lazy film makers whom like to retread successful ground and put their own spin on that success. Here the magical spin is literally snow and a man with a beard.Other than that, it's just The Blair Witch Project, right down to the white text on black stating that the crew were never seen again.And it's a right chore to get through, even though it's just shy of ninety minutes.So we get the predictable meet up, the warnings from the locals, the vox pop interviews with the locals, and the meet up with the weird person who knows a little too much about the legend.And then the obligatory rest of the film walking through the forest, finding strange things, and the crew slowly coming apart and arguing before they go off into the dark and scream in the distance.You've seen this film a thousand times before, and much better.Thhis is the epitome of lazy film making, and like the makers, you just cannot be bothered with the finished 'project'.I'd rather watch the best of Lionel Blair on loop for two weeks, rather than sit through this again.
Nigel P One of the things I like about the found footage genre is evidenced at the beginning of 'The Devil Within', when the camera remains locked onto a character as he conveys all kinds of emotion to the viewer without the help of moody lightning, artistic cutting or indeed anything to enhance the performance. The actor therefore has no choice but to play everything completely naturally because the unforgiving nature of an unedited shot would betray any lapse.That's the first impression I got from the opening moments as Professor Popescu (Adrian Carlugeo) warns us how terrible are the events we are about to see. He is wrong, unfortunately, for what follows is three actors with very little chemistry traipsing around the tremendous snowy Hoia Bacui Forest in a shockingly dull, blatant recreation of events in 'The Blair Witch Project (1999)' – inferior in every way, sadly. They get lost, argue and nothing happens. The discovery of the dead body of their erstwhile companion, the ferociously bearded Mr Dogaru (Bill Hutchins) fails to invest any scares into these uneventful wanderings: 'What happened to him?' 'He's f****** dead, that's what happened to him,' – all lines delivered with all the conviction of characters not remotely bothered.Rumour has it that for 'Blair Witch', the director left his cast alone for most of the time in the unforgiving location, only to creep up on them at night and scare them – this produced a very real, wearied, raw set of performances. Here, the terrain is even less hospitable, but there are no scares, no tension whatsoever – any energy is drained from the young cast producing beleaguered dramatics in a disappointingly uneventful picture.