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The Chair

The Chair (2007)

January. 01,2007
|
4.3
| Horror Thriller

Psychology student Danielle inadvertently wakes a evil spirit while renting a century old Victorian house. In setting out to prove his existence, Danielle inadvertently frees and becomes a puppet of the spirit of serial killer Edgar Crowe. Danielle's sister Anna now must find a way to stop Crowe without killing her sister.

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Reviews

WasAnnon
2007/01/01

Slow pace in the most part of the movie.

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SnoReptilePlenty
2007/01/02

Memorable, crazy movie

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Nayan Gough
2007/01/03

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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Geraldine
2007/01/04

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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The_Dead_See
2007/01/05

At the 30 minute point of The Chair, I was truly getting enjoyably creeped out. It was relatively standard "strange phenomena in creepy old house" fare, but it was done with just the right combination of discomforting lighting and sound to get under my skin. The lead actress was extremely appealing too, both easy on the eyes and approaching her character from a refreshingly intelligent standpoint. The quote on the case that led me to rent it said something along the lines of "achieves the same atmosphere as the Changeling or Amityville"... and for those first 30 minutes or so, it really did. There's one scene with a chair in a hallway that is frankly terrifying.But then a possession-style plot kicked in which, while still fairly entertaining, was nowhere near as powerful as the opening. The final half of the movie fell into a more mundane indie movie style, lost almost all of its creepiness, and sadly got a little unbelievable too. If the director had had the restraint to follow the tone of the first half through to the end it could have been a masterpiece in the haunted house genre. As it stands it's just another indie - far above average at first, then just average after that...

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sitenoise
2007/01/06

Horror films are a gamble but it's easy to tell fairly quickly when it's time to hold 'em and when it's time to fold 'em. The direction, cinematography, and character introductions reveal promptly where the film is aiming at on the stupid scale and how serious an effort it's going to be. The Chair was shot on video but looks remarkably good to my eyes and Brett Sullivan's direction is smartly done—not so much in the way he captures the scenes but for the way he gets to them—the camera peers around a corner, or from across the room, from inside a closet, or it nestles itself on the ceiling and observes from there. It's not rocket science to make those choices for a film about a haunted house, but Sullivan's execution is inspired.The Chair begins with a few black & white moments of spooky snippets and background data on mesmerism. Then we're brought to the present in the presence of a blond pony-tail. Uh-oh ... a quick shot of pony-tail girl from the attic of the house she's about to move into letting us know there's something up there, and pony-tail's off to the bathtub to relax and pleasure herself. Umm ...Alanna Chisholm plays the pony-tail and looks like she could be Nicole Sullivan's twin sister. Her performance makes this film a winner. Once she's out of the tub and on to developing her character it's refreshing to see she's not playing it anywhere near bimbo. She's got big expressive eyes and a quirky yet confident mixed-uppedness about her that's appealing, inviting both fear and empathy. We know she's medicated and has a history of breakdowns, which she uses to her advantage. Since she is operating under suspicion of not having both oars in the water, she is unpredictable—but never hysterical. She never imagines anything; it's all really happening. It's just up to her grad school self to find the paradigm it all fits into. When her sister and the cleavage she rode in on arrive to act as the reasonable foil, Chisholm begins playing with a cold determination that works as a transition to the possessed by the "never quite dead 100 year old spirit of a killer" that invades her body, character.Said spirit belongs to a man who was mesmerized right at the moment of death—while sitting in a spooky chair in the very house Chisholm now inhabits—and then buried alive causing him to remain in a state of horrifying limbo for a hundred years—a fate the mesmerist feels is worse than death for the man who killed his daughter, or something like that ... so there's some plot going on behind Chisholm's performance.Plot is a difficult thing and even if we give it only a 3.8 on a scale of 10 it could still win a batting title. What interests me more are the nuances and subtle humor Sullivan and Chisholm bring to the proceedings, which also grant the film membership in the much vaunted Horror version2 category.When it's time to explore the dark and secret room they discover in the house (plot), Chisholm and her sister's cleavage use one of those flashlights you have to wind up to get any light from. It's done without fanfare, making it quite funny. The big race-against-time action sequence toward the end of the film seems to fizzle out empty and unproductive, deliberately, making it funny and absurd. My favorite bits of the film, however, are when Chisholm settles down to research and does a slow roll of her neck, cracking it. Makes creepy noises.

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screencinderelly
2007/01/07

Saw and loved it at the Montreal Film Festival and saw it again recently, and liked it even more. Visually and in terms of story and character, this movie makes the most out of small moments and details, gathering them together, slowly but surely, toward a shocking climax. I was really impressed by Danielle's slow transformation from a troubled, pretty grad student to the masculinized host of the killer's spirit who takes possession of her. Also the head-scratching, how'd-they-do-that? spooky special effects (they make pancake batter really scary). You don't see this kind of subtlety and careful crafting too often in horror flicks.An unconventional supernatural thriller, beautifully shot and acted. Definitely not to every horror fan's taste, but I'm surprised to see the 1-votes. If you don't need buckets of blood and female hysterics to make you good and scared, this is a smart, well-made, satisfying, truly indie film.

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Alexandre_DeLarge
2007/01/08

I was at the world premiere in Montreal at cinema Imperial. It's a weird movie with low budget. It was shot in the director's apartment. It's about a girl who moves up in a strange house. Some paranormal thing begins. The girl start to changes and she wants to know more about this house... I have to admit this movie scared me. It was believable. After the viewing of this film, I felt strange emotions walking alone in the dark street (the film was programed at midnight). I really liked the main character, she was so great. It's hard to have that kind of transformation in a character that is not laughable. For her interpretation alone that movie is worth to see. The director did a goog job. I'll check out for his new films if he do more.

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