Mort de peur backdrop
Mort de peur poster

MORT DE PEUR

Campfire Tales

1997 US HMDB
février 28, 1997

Un groupe de jeunes touristes, coincés dans une forêt à la suite d'un accident de voiture, se raconte trois histoires effrayantes autour d'un feu, en attendant des secours.

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Equipe

Production: Eric Manes (Producer)Lori Miller (Producer)Larry Weinberg (Producer)David Cooper (Executive Producer)
Scenario: Martin Kunert (Screenplay)Matt Cooper (Screenplay)
Musique: Andrew Rose (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: John Peters (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Marco Castellini
Trois épisodes sous le signe de l'horreur : dans le premier, un couple en lune de miel décide de s'arrêter au milieu d'une forêt avec leur camping-car et est attaqué par d'horribles créatures ; dans le second, une jeune fille est piégée, via Internet, par un dangereux maniaque ; dans le troisième, un jeune homme revit un massacre survenu quelques années plus tôt. Un film classique en épisodes qui a cependant le mérite d'être plus original et d'avoir une touche plus horrifique que d'habitude. Le meilleur est le dernier épisode, le second n'est pas mal non plus tandis que le premier est le moins captivant. Fluide.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (1)

John Chard

John Chard

8 /10

Anthological Urban Legend Blast!

The horror anthology movie has been a popular source of enjoyment for horror fans for a number of decades. As is pretty much always the case, the quality of each segment of the films varies - and this always will be the case. Case in point Campfire Tales.

Something of a little treat for those inclined, this offers up four main stories and a wraparound device which involves four teenagers telling the tales around a campfire after their car has crashed. In my own anthology experiences, the main stories have tended to improve in quality as each story plays out, Campfire Tales is different, it opens weakly - has two great stories in the middle - and then closes on a damp boring squib. leading into the big - if unsurprising - reveal at films end.

The poster for the film puts Amy Smart and James Marsden up at the front, which is a bum steer given that their screen time is not massive. Their story, "The Hook", opens the film and it's poor, devoid of scares and tension, and it obviously gears itself up for a chilling reveal but it ends up more funny (even baffling) than creepy.

"The Honeymoon" is up next and things significantly improve. Based on one of the most famous of urban legends, this finds a young couple of honeymooners stranded out in the woods when their camper van runs out of petrol. Choices are made, menacing terror begins, which all leads to a genuinely shocking finale.

Next up is "People Can Lick Too", which finds a young girl home alone and stalked by a paedophile she met on line. The whole episode has a sinister eeriness to it, with some reveals sending chills down the spine. The ending is heart stopping and blood curdling.

The last segment is "The Locket", which is well acted but ultimately more wistful and ethereal than anything scary or unnerving. Though the denouement is sure to appeal to many. Nice musical score here as well. And on to the reveal, straight out of The Twilight Zone and from any number of films of the same ilk. Great fun even if not all the stories knock it out of the park. 7.5/10

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