Nunca apagues la luz

  • México Cuando las luces se apagan (más)
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Sinopsis(1)

Cuando Rebecca se fue de casa, pensó que había dejado atrás sus miedos de la niñez. A medida que iba creciendo, nunca estaba realmente segura de lo que era real o no cuando se apagaban las luces... y ahora su hermano pequeño, Martin, atraviesa los mismos sucesos inexplicables y aterradores que una vez pusieron a prueba la cordura de Rebecca y amenazaron su seguridad. Un aterrador ente con una misteriosa predilección por su madre, Sophie, ha resurgido. Pero en esta ocasión, y a medida que Rebecca se acerca a la indescifrable verdad, no cabe duda de que todas sus vidas están en peligro... cuando se apaga la luz. (Warner Bros. España)

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Reseñas (8)

POMO 

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español El concepto de esta supuestamente película de género ordinaria, que trabaja con clichés trillados, con metraje de las comedias con Leslie Nielsen, es una lástima. Y una pena por el escaso desarrollo de los personajes. El monstruo de Diana tiene más potencial, en sí mismo es más aterradora que cualquier escena de las obras maestras del director Wan. Las escenas con ella evolucionan desde un hormigueo continuo hasta un final muy intenso. ()

Marigold 

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inglés A horror that doesn't waste time exposing and building tension, which works quite well in the straightforward first third. The idea works, Sandberg tested it in a short, but here he exploits it beyond his means. In the second half you can feel it. Lights Out is unable to tighten, surprise or unfortunately really scare anyone. Formally solid work, but overall dim. ()

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lamps 

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inglés You can't shine a light. We’ve probably never had a similarly intense and original scare in cinemas, and in today's horror competition, it's hard to imagine a more effective way to make the audience's return home through darkened streets as unpleasant as possible. It goes full speed ahead from the start and, without any unnecessary talk, we are served an intelligent horror plot spiced up with such a thick atmosphere and such a scary monster that I would grunt with joy if I didn't have my vocal cords clenched with nervousness. Plus the flawless escalation, thanks to which the evil doesn't stop scaring even towards the end, the reasonable runtime and of course the absolutely disarming beauty of Terasa Palmer, thanks to whom I didn't breathe even in the less tense scenes. Pointless to complain and whine, that's all we can ask for. ()

Malarkey 

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inglés As a small-scale film, this movie is quite fine. What’s also fine however is how the director took the original idea, which had been made into a short film, and managed to turn it into a feature film. It’s nothing complicated, but it works. It’s not silly at all. People behave the way real people do rather than behaving like rubber figurines on paper. So, all in all? A pleasant horror movie surprise – it won’t offend you and while it won’t make you excited either, it gets the mission fulfilled with a full number of survivors. ()

J*A*S*M 

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inglés I can’t ask more from mainstream horror. A very simple plot that doesn’t waste much time and goes straight to what matters, scaring. The idea originally used in Sandberg’s short is varied again and again, and it still works. The ghost or monster is hidden in the dark for most of the time, but even when you can see more of it by the end, it doesn’t lose much of its horror. The “friend’s” ghost backstory that I dreaded in the trailer is delivered elegantly and it actually sounds a little disturbing. But what sets this film above its mainstream competition are the characters and their relationships. Everyone is nice or at least you can understand their behaviour. But, most importantly, they aren’t one-dimensional figures devoid of personality and, already from the beginning, the film works with relationships that are not totally banal. I won’t say that it delivers some nuanced psychological picture, but it still goes a lot further than the overrated Conjuring. Although Lights Out is basically an intimate horror movie, for me it’s better than Wan’s bigger works. The characters are under a real threat. Technically it is comparable to the premier league. It’s unlikely to be the best of the year (that one already appears regularly in indie waters), but it’s certainly the best mainstream horror flick in recent years. I will gladly watch it again. 9/10 ()

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