Session 9 backdrop
Session 9 poster

SESSION 9

2001 US HMDB
agosto 10, 2001

Hace quince años que el Hospital Mental de Danvers (Massachussetts), que se levanta amenazador en medio de un bosque, ha sido cerrado, y los vecinos procuran mantenerse alejados del lugar. Gordon Fleming (Peter Mullan), un emigrante escocés que posee y dirige Hazmat Elimination Co., necesita urgentemente conseguir el contrato para retirar los peligrosos residuos de amianto del hospital. Con tal de cerrar el acuerdo, Gordon, imprudentemente, promete al ingeniero local Bill Griggs (Paul Guilfoyle) que el trabajo durará sólo una semana. Una vez firmado el contrato, los hombres de Hazmat se adentran en los vastos y espeluznantes salones y pasillos del hospital. A medida que pasa el tiempo, el equipo se siente cada vez más arrastrado por los misterios que rodean al hospital.

Directores

Reparto

Comentarios

Equipo

Produccion: David Collins (Producer)John Sloss (Executive Producer)Dorothy Aufiero (Producer)Michael Williams (Producer)
Guion: Stephen Gevedon (Screenplay)Brad Anderson (Screenplay)
Musica: Climax Golden Twins (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Uta Briesewitz (Director of Photography)

RESEÑAS (1)

Marco Castellini

Gordon gestiona una empresa de descontaminación en dificultades financieras; la victoria de una licitación para eliminar los residuos de amianto de un antiguo hospital psiquiátrico que se va a reformar podría ser la salvación para él y sus empleados. El equipo formado por cinco operarios en total, se pone inmediatamente a trabajar, pero la permanencia entre las paredes del hospital y las siniestras leyendas que flotan entre sus paredes, contribuyen a aumentar la presión. Los largos e interminables pasillos, las celdas donde se encerraban a los pacientes más peligrosos y los húmedos sótanos del cobertizo en ruinas esconden aún algunos terribles secretos... La película tiene una historia particular: el director Brad Anderson descubrió el Danvers Mental Hospital, una estructura de finales del siglo XIX, abandonada a principios de los años ochenta, mientras vagaba en coche por los suburbios de Boston; su aspecto decididamente lúgubre, capaz de crear ansiedad solo con mirarlo, lo convenció de inmediato de que sería perfecto como escenario para el ambiente de una película de terror. Y entonces aquí está esta "Session 9", verdadera pequeña gran sorpresa de la temporada en el género de terror; filmada en digital, con un nuevo sistema de Sony en desarrollo, y luego transferida a película, la película no tiene ninguna necesidad de recurrir a escenas truculentas o desmembramientos varios para transmitir el "sentido del terror"; más bien, el director, utilizando al máximo la cámara y sobre todo las lúgubres ambientaciones del manicomio (que parece una especie de enorme Overlook Hotel de "Shining") guía al espectador en una pesadilla que se vuelve cada vez más angustiosa, culminando en un final escalofriante. La parte central resulta un poco lenta pero eso era inevitable para presentar la psique de los diversos personajes y proporcionar al espectador las pistas para comprender, y quizás anticipar, las angustiosas secuencias finales. Una grata sorpresa de un director emergente; se recomienda definitivamente la visión.

Comentarios

RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (1)

John Chard

John Chard

10 /10

Madness is just overactive curiosity.

Session 9 is directed by Brad Anderson who also co-writes the screenplay with Stephen Gevedon. It stars Peter Mullan, David Caruso, Josh Lucas, Brendan Sexton III and Stephen Gevedon. Music is scored by Climax Golden Twins and cinematography is by Uta Briesewitz.

Danvers State Hospital (AKA: State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers, The Danvers Lunatic Asylum, and The Danvers State Insane Asylum), Massachusetts. Built in 1874, opened in 1878 and closed in 1992. The home to misery, madness, tragedies and troubling treatments. Five men from an asbestos removal company, each with issues or points to prove, enter the vast bat shaped structure under the promise of a big pay off to get the job done in one week. But over the course of the week money will be the last thing on their minds.

Psychological horror at its finest, Session 9, in the hands of Brad Anderson, pretty much gets everything right in this most skin itching of sub-genres. Like the ghost story splinter of horror, setting is absolutely everything, and few, if any? Horror settings are as imposing or eerie as the one time Danvers State Hospital. Sadly demolished in 2006/7 to make way for an apartment complex (bastard property developers have no respect outside of the purse), the place positively oozes unease throughout the movie. With Anderson choosing to shoot his film on videotape, this further aids the sense of realism and palpable dread, and although it isn't a stretch of the mind to think about some of the misery that played out in reality at Danvers, Anderson and his photographer Briesewitz ensure that it never leaves our conscious. Tone is set from the off as being slow burn, this is perfect as it allows us to get a grasp of the characters, their psychological make ups and narrative worth.

With the Danvers facility proving to be the extra character, all things come together seamlessly to gnaw away at the viewers. It's a devilishly odd thing to say, but as the story and characters are given room to breath, the audience who have immersed themselves in the picture will start to feel claustrophobic, and then for the night time sequences, even achluophobic. It's pitch perfect pacing by Anderson, who prior to unleashing the unnerving finale, has pulled us (and his excellent cast) slowly through a labyrinth of dank corridors, wards, treatment rooms, caged stairwells and a morgue. Even on the outside during daylight hours everything feels bleak, either with characters loomed over by the building, or on a roof chatting while Gothic turrets watch over them menacingly, the ghosts and bitterness of Danvers Hospital exist fully in Anderson's movie.

Story links a tape recording found by Mike (Gevedon) with that of the workers' unfolding plight. The tape tells of 9 sessions with a troubled patient named Mary Hobbes, to say anymore would be spoilerish, but for the record in this writers eyes it's the creepiest tape recording in horrorville. Add in the odd hospital prop such as a lone wheelchair, a hydrotherapy bath or an orbitoclast! Well you get the picture I'm sure. Climax Golden Twins provide a suitably jarring score, where disjointed noises and elongated tonal strains further enhance the pervading disquiet. Picture only falls down slightly with silly plot error involving a furnace, and for some folk the ending will inevitably be met with dissatisfaction. I liked it plenty but I also feel they could have gone another way with it. But it does work well and isn't a cop out, and certainly it's better than the alternate ending available in the extras section of home disc formats.

It's a horror film aimed at a certain horror fan, the one who has the patience to enjoy slow burn psychological pin prickery. All played out expertly by cast and film makers at a naturally unsettling location. 9/10

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB